The two back-to-back televised
interviews given yesterday by India’s first-ever Chief of Defence Staff (CDS)
Gen Bipin Rawat and the Indian Air Force’s 26th Chief of Air Staff
(CAS) Air Chief Marshal Rakesh Kumar Singh Bhadauria, have not only caused much
consternation, but have also exposed the intellectual faultlines between the
three armed services. Here are the two interviews:
CDS: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwhbsvN9o_I
CAS of IAF: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7timgL3mEa4
Such intellectual faultlines, which have
developed since the early 1960s, are primarily due to the perceptional ‘battle
horizons’ of each of the three armed services. For instance, the Indian Army
(IA) generally has a battle horizon of “a day’s march”, within which it sees
its battlespace. The Indian Navy (IN), on the other hand, operates in “a few Knots
per hour” domain, while the Indian Air Force (IAF) operates new “a few hundred
Knots per hour” domain. Consequently, the IAF’s airpower has the capability to
strike across the targetting cycle, directly at the enemy’s military and
political leadership, if so desired, while prosecuting war at all three levels—tactical,
operational and strategic—in any air campaign seamlessly. It is such perceptional
differences that caused the CDS to define the IAF as being a “supporting
warfighting arm” yesterday, which in turn throws into danger the armed forces’
projected objectives of achieving theaterisation of the armed forces and the
adoption of joint and synergised warfighting doctrines. Such deep-rooted perceptional
divergences have not arisen overnight, but are rooted in illogical
decision-making processes that began way back in the early 1960s. Here is the
first recorded divergence highlighted in the slide below:
As a result, the IA frittered away a
golden opportunity to co-locate the geographical commands of the IA and IAF
under one roof, and delayed the raising of an Army Air Corps by another 24
years (it was finally raised on November 1, 1986 for operating only LUHs, while approval for the IA to operate attack helicopters came only in August 2017). The IA then could easily
have driven a hard bargain and in return for agreeing to the IAF retaining ownership,
command-and-control over SAGW assets, it could have had its own integral fleets
of aeroscout, CASEVAC and attack helicopters (to meet its immediate air-support
requirements), thereby freeing the IAF to focus on air-defence, deep-strike and
tactical interdiction missions.
It was in 1975 that the then Govt of
India appointed an expert committee (on re-organisation & Modernisation of
the IA) in 1975 to undertake, probably for the first time, a long-term perspective
plan for the IA. The committee was headed by Lt Gen (later General) Kotikalapudi
Venkata Krishna Rao, with Major Generals M L Chibber and K Sunderji as members
and Brig A J M Homji as secretary. It was mandated to present a perspective
plan till the year 2000. Interestingly, the mandate was given under challenging
circumstances, which despite the prospect of a two-front war, required the Army
to cap its strength at 8.38 lakh (in order to cater for increased budgetary
pressures in the aftermath of the 1973 Middle East oil crisis). The committee’s
report of nine volumes, encompassing 1,740 pages, contained far-reaching
recommendations, which were to be implemented over 25 years. Although the
report was accepted by the Govt of India, most of the recommendations were not
acted upon. The principal recommendations were:
1) Creation of the post of Chief of Defence Staff.
2) Transformation of the offensive infantry
formations from motorised to mechanised.
3)
Creation of a Unified Air-Defence Command led by the IAF.
4) Creation of a Joint Logistics Command.
5) Creation of a Joint Training Command. Therefore, it is fallacy
to claim that the creation of the post of CDS was first proposed by the Kargil
Review Committee or the Naresh Chandra Committee, or that the proposal for raising
a Unified Air-Defence Command was born in 2016.
In the existing system each service
plans its own logistics following its own planning, provisioning,
transportation and delivery model. This has resulted in tremendous amount of
duplication, long inventories, and a colossal waste of precious resources that
goes against the very ethos of an efficient economy. It is imperative that the
logistics organisations of the three armed services are integrated into one,
thereby enabling optimisation of resources. The UK Chief of Defence Material,
US Defence Logistics Agency, and the PLA’s Joint Logistics Support Force (JLSF)
have all functioned very efficiently and India too needs to create a Joint
Logistics Command.
There are few organisational structures
in place that could meaningfully formulate or impart the desired level of joint
training. The essential ingredients of a joint training system (philosophy,
infrastructure, and processes) need to be implemented. Therefore, to give
impetus to jointness and promote synergy amongst the three armed services,
there is a need to start training officers together from junior command and
equivalent courses onwards. Integration of the three higher command courses
into one curriculum would be the next logical step akin to higher defence
management courses and at the National Defence College. The role of HQ
Integrated Defence Staff (IDS) should be extended from merely promulgating
joint doctrine and joint military strategy, from which flow the individual
service doctrines, to being fully integrated in the planning and conduct of
joint exercises and the validation of the joint doctrine and military strategy.
This necessitates the creation of an integrated joint training command under
which all training establishments function.
Since future military operations will be
conducted in the backdrop of cyber warfare and information dominance, this
necessitates synchronisation of all resources for better synergy and utilization.
The necessity of a tri-services Cyber Command has already been accepted by the armed
services. In 2008, an Integrated Space Cell under HQ IDS was established for integration
between the armed forces, the Department of Space, and the Indian Space
Research Organisation (ISRO). The logic behind the creation of a Joint Aerospace
Command is abundantly clear: firstly, as India’s requirements for space applications
increase, the necessity of a single agency coordinating different activities
becomes paramount. Secondly, the presence of a single entity will allow India
to better promote its national interests in Outer Space as it becomes
increasingly crowded and contested. Though its necessity has been accepted by
the armed services, one needs to look at US model where it has merged its Space
Command into the Strategic Command, which now looks after both the nuclear and
space realms, while a separate Space Force Command was raised in December 2019.
In 2013, the Indian Armed Forces have submitted a proposal for the creation of
three new tri-service commands: Cyber command, Aerospace command, and Special
Operations Command. As per the plans, the Special Operations Command will be
headed by an IA officer and the Aerospace Command by an IAF officer, while the
Cyber Command will get its head on a rotational basis from the three services.
Dismal Joint Forces Warfighting Record
Conceptually, jointness implies the
synergised use of resources of the three armed services in a seamless manner to
achieve the best results in the least possible time. The idea is to avoid
needless redundancy and optimally utilise available resources. Jointness
implies cross-services combination wherein the capability of the joint force is
understood to be synergistic, with the sum greater than its parts (the
capability of individual components). Joint forces also require high levels of
inter-operability and systems that are conceptualised and designed with joint
architectures and acquisition strategies. This level of inter-operability
reduces technical, doctrinal and cultural barriers that limit the ability of
joint force commanders to achieve their assigned objectives. The goal is to
employ joint forces effectively across the range of military operations. Firstly,
based on unity of effort, jointness seeks to focus all the energy of armed
forces across the range of military operations, throughout all levels of war,
in every environment toward enhancing the effectiveness of military operations.
Secondly, joint forces provide commanders with multi-dimensional capabilities
(land, sea, air, syber, space and special operations) that are more effective
than uni-service forces by providing a wider range of operational and tactical
options. Finally, multiple service capabilities allow an innovative forces commander
to combine joint capabilities in asymmetrical as well as symmetrical ways to
produce a total military impact that is greater than the sum of its parts. To
be truly integrated, the coordinating mechanisms must be so designed that an
assorted force can be immediately assembled and dispatched to meet various
contingencies/scenarios. Integrated forces are premised on the presence of a
theatre commander with over-riding authority. He/she is vested with authority
and the resources to undertake operational missions, and is alone responsible
for the employment of all three armed services components functioning under him/her.
His/her orders will cut down the response time in developing situations during
operations, and exploit fleeting windows of opportunity.
The need for jointness in the Indian
context was well appreciated even at the time of India’s independence. India
inherited a command structure for the services that had unity of command, under
a Commander-in-Chief. Soon, a Joint Services Wing was set up for training
officer cadets, which later became the Khadakvasla-based National Defence
Academy, followed by the establishment of the Wellington-based Defence Services
Staff College. To these were added, in due course, the College of Defence
Management at Secundrabad at a more senior level, and finally, the National
Defence College at New Delhi for training officers of the rank of Brigadier and
equivalent. This framework for joint training of officers at different levels
and to bring them together again at different stages of their careers was,
therefore, well laid out and continues till date. It has yielded some good
results in bringing about inter-service bonhomie. However, optimisation in
jointness for conventional warfighting continues to elude India’s armed forces.
The India-Pakistan conflict
in 1947-1948 was essentially an IA action, with the IAF’s airpower being used
only to transport troops and equipment and to provide limited close air-support
(aerial straffing) to ground troops. Later, in 1961, the military was again
involved in a brief two-day conflict to liberate Goa, but this was without any
opposition. In the conflict with China in 1962, the IAF and the IN
did not come into play at all in any offensive manner (with the IAF only
conducting limited tactical recce and extensive air-maintenance and CASEVAC
sorties with fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters) and watched from the sidelines.
Finally, the three armed services did come to fight together against Pakistan
in 1965, but without any pre-conceived synergised battle-plan. In
short, in all these conflicts, whatever their extent and severity, it was
essentially only land-based force projection that came into play. The IAF did
participate more meaningfully in the 1965 war, but without much synergy with
the plans of the IA. No post-conflict enquiries or studies were ordered or
conducted by India’s Ministry of Defence (MoD). The war with
Pakistan in 1971 was the first real military operation since Independence in
which all three armed services were full participants. By April 1971, it had
been assessed that military conflict was likely, even inevitable. The then
Chief of the Army Staff, Gen (later Field Marshal) S H F J Manekshaw wanted
time to complete preparations, for the monsoon season to get over and also for
winter to set in so that mountain passes on the India-China border would be
rendered impassable. These factors taken together, allowed the armed forces
about seven months to get their act in order. In this period, it was expected
that the military would formulate a common and synergised OP-PLAN into which operations
of all three armed services would be dovetailed. This did not happen. There was
no integrated planning of the campaign, which resulted in quite a few unplanned
and uncoordinated decisions being made. As the war progressed, for example, the
sudden decision to launch an ground assault on Chittagong, was soon changed to
Cox Bazaar. The troops chosen, Gurkhas, with their short stature and relative
unfamiliarity with water, were singularly unsuited for that purpose. There was
no training, and beach survey, a crucial prerequisite, was inadequate. Not
surprisingly, the operation was a total fiasco with no aims achieved and some
lives lost. In another episode, IAF Gnats attacked Mukti Bahini vessels
operating in the waters off Khulna without being aware that these were friendly
forces. One of the two boats sank, some of the crew killed, and others wounded
and captured. The attacks carried out on vital
installations at Karachi from the air and by sea, were also not part of any
combined plan. There are other instances of mismatch between the different
wings. Lt Gen J F R Jacob, who, as Chief of Staff of the IA’s Eastern Command
was responsible for conduct of operations in the eastern sector, subsequently
went on record to say that the three wings of the military went about doing
their own things without any synergy. The war was fought in a tripartite
fashion with no unified or accountable military authority in command even
though, as might be expected, Gen Manekshaw as the then Chairman of the Chiefs
of Staff Committee (COSC) was primus inter pares for the political leadership.
Not unexpectedly, this reluctance to boldly institutionalise the ground reality
resulted in more discord than harmony.
India’s armed forces were called to action in 1987 once
again, albeit in a somewhat modified role, when they were asked to proceed as
the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) to Sri Lanka. The COSC
appointed the GOC-in-C Southern Command, Lt Gen Depinder Singh as the Overall
Force Commander (OFC). Component Commanders from the three armed services were
subordinated to him with command of operational forces delegated from the
Eastern Naval Command and the Southern Air Command, respectively. A formal
Directive was issued to the OFC to undertake the ordered missions in Sri Lanka.
While on surface it appeared that the Indian military hierarchy had finally
come of age; alas, this proved too good to be true. In less than a month from
the time that IPKF moved into Sri Lanka, the situation was turned on its head.
The IN and IAF Cs-in-C, responsible for providing forces, declined to delegate
command and forced their superiors in New Delhi, i.e., the Service Chiefs, to
get the component commanders designated as Liaison Officers with no role other
than to act as go-betweens between the OFC’s HQ and of the Cs-in-C. Relatively
junior officers were appointed to do this work, further diluting the authority
and accountability of the OFC. The COSC, with no permanent head, was, itself,
shown up as a weak structure, with its own internal rifts and dissension and
incapable of enforcing its will. The IPKF grew from one Division in 1987 to
four by 1989, but it was never one force under one command, as originally
contemplated. The OFC lost credibility and was, in effect, just the commander
of the land forces, with the IAF and IN cooperating, but independently. Apart
from the political infirmities of the intervention, poor command-and-control
must rate as the most important military failure of OP PAWAN.
OP VIJAY in 1999 was essentially a land battle in which some offensive
airpower was used under OP VIJAY to soften enemy positions and conduct tactical
recce sorties. The IN, somewhat exaggeratedly, decided to concentrate its
entire strength on the western seaboard (such deployments do not come without
great cost) under OP TALWAAR, signalling a degree of belligerence not visible
in the political posture. It took two months for the IA forces to regain the
heights after Pakistan was forced to withdraw. This time too, there were
glaring mismatches between the highest military leadership. The IAF was not
prepared to provide the Mi-25/Mi-35P attack helicopters that the IA requested
since such platforms could not fly over the Pir Panjal mountain range while
taking off fully loaded from air bases in southern Jammu & Kashmir. In
fact, the IAF at that time did not even deploy a single airspace surveillance radar
north of the Zoji La Pass! The IA, for its part, was reluctant to share full
details of what had actually happened. When the IA sought air-strikes for
immediate air-support, the then CAS of the IAF, ACM A Y Tipnis, disingenuously,
demurred on the logic that this required political approval (despite such
air-strikes being conducted within India-controlled airspace along the LoC). In
short, once again the armed forces stumbling into action without a synergised
plan.
This is because the three Service
Chiefs, despite having been converted from Commanders-in-Chief of their
respective wings into Chiefs of Staff in 1955, continue to act in their former
roles and are, therefore, responsible for the conduct of operations. They do
this by issuing directives to their respective commanders. For example, in the IN,
these are the Western and Eastern Naval Commands which, in turn, give out
orders to their subordinate operational commanders and task forces. Where any
assistance is required from another wing, say air-support from the IAF, this
has to be arranged through the Mumbai-based Maritime Air Operations (MAO) Directorate,
an IAF institution, acting as the link. The MAO interacts with the appropriate
IAF geographic Command HQ which, in turn, issues instructions to the IAF air
base holding the relevant air assets. Often, IAF HQ itself may have to be
approached. The arrangement is about the same as far as the IA is concerned.
All operational geographic IA Commands have IAF elements attached to them, not
as subordinates but as advisers. They, in turn, interact with their own
superiors to arrange the desired support through IAF air bases. In brief, the
inter-services interaction is through several tiers, both laterally and
vertically. The desired air-support might not be provided, possibly for good
reason and even if it is, may not be in the form and strength requisitioned.
Thus, the person responsible for execution of a task does not have control over
all the forces that are deployed. On the other hand, the authority providing
supporting forces is not responsible for the successful achievement of any
operation. The shortcomings of this system were and are readily apparent: the IAF has no role to play in the Cold Start doctrine of the IA, nor is the IAF being consulted by the IA for inputs on the composition of terrain-specific Integrated Battle Groups!
The Sequential Way Ahead
If one were to access the
combat theaterisation processes adopted by countries like the US and China, it
will emerge that both these countries have had to embrace on a colossal scale simulation
technologies that firstly aimed at optimising joint, synergised warfighting
doctrines, tactics and technologies, and secondly through these, achieve consolidation
of the capabilities, capacities and resources that are required for combat theaterisation.
Wargames are analytic games that simulate aspects of warfare at the tactical,
operational, or strategic level. They are used to examine warfighting concepts,
train and educate commanders and analysts, explore scenarios, and assess how
force-planning and posture choices affect campaign outcomes. The US has
developed various types of wargames, including short-term (one to two
years), medium-term (five to seven years), and long-term (seven to 20
years) scenario exercises, table-top map exercises, “Day After…” wargames,
and computer-supported exercises. In 1984, the War Gaming and Simulation Center
(WGSC) was founded at the US National Defense University. WGSC was responsible
for the design and delivery of all experiential events associated with the
colleges across the NDU. At this time, the WGSC exercises focussed
primarily on politico-military exercises via the use of tabletop exercises and
traditional “blue vs. red” scenarios. Following the tragic events of
September 11, 2001, Vice Admiral Gaffney, the then NDU President, was
determined to ensure that the WGSC become a true national asset for strategic-level
exercises. So, in 2002, given this directive, the WGSC was transformed
into the National Strategic Gaming Center (NSGC) where it became responsible
for not only providing national strategic-level exercises in support of the
JPME mission of NDU, but also providing exercise design and delivery assistance
to the warfighter via exercises for the various Combatant Commands, the Office
of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, the White House, and
Congress, i.e., the all-of-country approach.
In 1979, China first
established an operational planning analysis research structure and began
to simulate military operational problems. Operational planning analysis
incorporated aspects of computers, information technology, and other new
elements of science and technology to warfare, in ways that had not been
possible in the ideologically charged Mao-era. As the PLA sought to inculcate
officers with greater familiarity with advanced technologies, the increasingly
complex and sophisticated problems of modern warfare could no longer be
addressed solely through classroom discussions. This lent impetus to the
creation of a number of forms of computerised wargaming and operational
modelling software, such as “Joint 99” and the “Red Star System.” In addition,
major PME institutions such as the Ground Forces Staff College at Shijiazhuang,
as well as the various Military Region (MR) HQs, all had their own
computerised wargaming centres. It is in the midst of this period, in 1997,
that Maj Gen Hu Xiaofeng came to the fore. Hu was transferred from the National
University of Defence Technology (NUDT) to the National Defence University (NDU)
in 1997 by order of the Central Military Commission (CMC) itself to take charge
of the PLA’s computer wargaming efforts. He had been one of the first students
to be enrolled in Dr Qian Xuesen’s Systems Engineering & Mathematics Department.
Thus, Hu’s academic pedigree was impeccable, being associated with the man
identified as the father of China’s nuclear and space programmes. Hu attracted the
attention of senior PLA leaders because of his familiarity with systems
engineering, and the belief that PLA wargaming would have to incorporate
aspects of this field. At the same time, however, Hu also had a military
background. He was among the first students to enter the PME system after the
revival of the national testing system, and had enrolled at the newly re-established
NUDT. He also worked extensively on military information &
communications systems after graduating. Hu’s efforts received highest
level support from within the PLA. This was important, since Hu initially had
trouble attracting sufficient human resource talent to help write the various
software programmes. His efforts were facilitated, even accelerated, by the
decision in 1999 to consolidate various warfighting laboratories and wargaming
efforts within a single organisational structure and a unified training system.
Hu was made chief designer and subject matter leader for the PLA’s entire operations
analysis laboratory development effort, and the NDU was made the central nodal
institution housing it. Hu and his team engaged in extensive research,
visiting MRs to interview hundreds of officers, and writing over ten million
lines of code in the course of their development effort. Their initial product,
introduced in the early 2000s, was the “Whetstone” (or “Sword Sharpening”)
series of operational-level command training models. These were China’s
first efforts at a computer-based, war-zone level, intranet-based campaign
exercise. Hu subsequently designed the first strategic-level computerised
wargames, the “Absolute Victory” series, incorporating economic and political
elements into the military systems. He also designed an “immersion style” multi-player
networked gaming system to facilitate strategic-level decision-making. These
efforts garnered for Hu high-level recognition, including awards for advancing
both the national level of science and technology and military science and technology.
In 2007, Hu began designing a computerised wargaming system that would link
strategic- and campaign-level operations. PLA writings suggest that, since the
renewed focus on developing tri-services PLA wargames in 2007, their wargaming
efforts, and specifically their computerised wargaming systems, are intended to
support two key areas: CMC-level command-and-control decision-making; and
decision-making under wartime conditions, including informational uncertainty
amidst dynamic, constantly changing conditions.
Part of the objective was to
accelerate the decision-making cycle, since the multi-domain network-centric
battlespace will not allow for delays. Command-and-control decision-making,
especially in “local wars under high-tech conditions,” or now under multi-domain
network-centric conditions, must focus on the development of plans and
responses, often in immediate response to developing circumstances, rather than
the previous emphasis on implementing process and procedures developed long in
advance of the conflict or situation. Computerised wargames are thus seen
as promoting closer situational analysis, more flexible tactics, and
training commanders and staffs to “think more completely, more precisely, more
deeply, which will produce more effective levels of command stratagem.” This
more flexible, more responsive training, in turn, requires the ability to make
clear whether any particular decision is right or wrong, beneficial or harmful.
It is also essential to identify key points in the course of a campaign, i.e.,
which decisions were most important, and at what points are decision-making
necessary. Identifying such moments and decisions requires a degree of rigour
to be credible, and cannot be the function of biases or relationships. PLA
literature 20 years ago suggests that previous attempts at developing wargaming
(not necessarily just computerised wargaming) yielded results that were either
scripted, or influenced by subjective assessments.
The new computerised systems,
by contrast, allow more “free play” and autonomy on the part of players, but
with the results derived more objectively. When one computerized wargame
reported high casualties in the course of an action, the underlying
algorithms could be displayed to allow players to better understand the
results. This need for rigour is especially important, as the PLA apparently is
also seeking to incorporate more realism into its wargames. In particular, wargames
can help emulate both the time-urgency associated with modern warfare, as well
as uncertainty due to the lack of complete battlespace situational awareness. This
latter aspect has been a source of PLA concern and commentary for at least a
decade. Thus, the ability to incorporate the fog of war and uncertainty has
thoroughly altered the thinking and command styles of PLA commanders and their
staffs. It is Hu Xiaofeng’s efforts, as well as the perceived utility of
computerised wargaming, that has led to a growing employment of such systems
within the PLA. Intriguingly, it would appear that such games started with
simulations of inter-service strategic problems, and have since expanded
towards more tactical simulations, at the individual service-level. By 2013 tactical-level
wargames were employed by all MRs and Military Districts, while the
individual armed services engaged in combined-arms (i.e., inter-branch)
wargames, in addition to joint inter-services wargames.
In India’s case too, similar sequential,
scientific steps are required to be taken, firstly, for achieving jointness,
and only then embracing combat theaterisation. For this to happen, the Indian
NDU (INDU) at Gurugram, under construction since May 2013, needs to be operationalized
ASAP, followed by the establishment of a multi-domain national wargaming centre
within the INDU’s campus.
Ways To Achieve Jointness
Back in the previous decade, the world
got its first-ever demonstration of joint forces network-centric multi-domain warfare
operations when for the very first time new-generation common data-links were
put to use during OP Iraqi Freedom (OIF) to ensure inter-operability,
create common operational battlespace pictures, and
increase situational awareness to hitherto unprecedented levels. Closing the
sensor-to-shooter loops with precision and with rapidity differentiated OIF
from the German ‘Blitzkrieg’ aerospace-air-land coordination. The various OIF
campaigns were precise because all objects were digitised and de-conflicted
before an engagement. This was a result of real-time blue and red force
tracking through a myriad of sensors integrated using near real-time ODLs. The
sensor-to-shooter loops were shorter because the sensors and shooters were
tightly integrated through a series of stacked data-links in many cases. A
combination of video imagery feeds, situational awareness updates and
command-and-control data-links created a real-time collaboration environment
for prosecuting all the warfighting operations in which the environment was
highly localised and supported a few nodes (for a sensor-to-shooter system),
reflecting a near-optimal pairing of sensors and weapons to target. In effect,
airpower was reinforced; the integration of a myriad of sensors, intelligence
analysts, planners and decision-makers using data links reinforced the
effective use of joint forces (army, navy and air force) airpower.
The various types of data-links using
Time-Division Multiple Access (TDMA) techniques that were employed during OIF
included:
1. Common
data-links (CDL), used for down linking sensor information to the ground
control stations of command-and-control nodes. They were used to support the
exchange and fusion of intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance (ISR) information
and employed mainly by manned ISR platforms.
2. Tactical common
data-links (TCDL), a part of the CDL family, used to equip unmanned aerial
platforms (UAS) that were used for ISR applications.
3. Link-16, which
is the US Department of Defense’s primary tactical data information Link
(TADIL) based on J-series messages for airborne battle management. It was used
for exchanging command-and-control messages between various manned and unmanned
aerial platforms, i.e., surveillance tracks, electronic warfare, weapons
coordination, etc. It supported a wide area of operations within a 300nm
diameter.
4. The enhanced
position location reporting system (EPLRS)/situational awareness data-link
(SADL), which complemented Link 16 by providing the ground situational
awareness picture. Aircraft equipped with SADL also share air surveillance
tracks and command-and-control information updates.
5. Video data-links,
which provided information/video downlinks from UAS and target-designation pods
carried by combat aircraft to specific joint tactical air-control (JTAC)
centres and/or special operations forces (SOF) with specially encrypted transceivers.
Of these five data-links, the EPLRS played
an important role when unleashing fire-assaults (via both ground-based
artillery and manned/unmanned aerial platforms) because it was able to display
the five closest friendly units within proximity, regardless of the target
position. This was critical as the Blue Force Tracker (BFT) provided a non-real-time
update of Blue Forces’ position, with refreshes occurring approximately every
five to ten minutes. The information from BFT could not be used to gauge the
accurate position of a unit to avoid fratricides. The video downlinks from UAS
and target designation pods gave JTACs and SOF units a positive identification
of a target. It also enabled the JTACs and SOF units to guide shooters like
combat aircraft to the targets. Battle damage assessment (BDA) through the
video downlinks was also instantaneous, enabling a faster decision to re-strike
if necessary. While EPLRS and video data-links provided the capability for
precise and rapid decentralised execution, the suite of CDLs, TCDLs and Link-16
provided the means for integrating intelligence with command-and-control nodes,
enabling centralised control and the efficient allocation of resources, such as
weapons and sensors to target pairing. Such an increase in the sophistication
of data-links enabled integration and operational effectiveness. However, it
came with a price. The Germans during World war-2 had relied mainly on HF
radios for communications. This entailed the same frequency and waveform
operations. The advantage was greater manageability and unquestioned inter-operability
across air-land elements. OIF used different types of data-links. Consequently,
for inter-operability, ‘gateways’ were required. For example, integrating Link-16
and EPLRS/SADL required the Transparent Multi-Platform Gateway (TMPG). The TMPG
translated Link-16 TADIL-J messages to SADL-type messages. The different types
of data-links have thus created a situation where gateways have now become a
necessity. The gateways can be deployed on various types of ground-based, naval
and airborne platforms. The manageability, mobility, persistence and
survivability of these platforms have to be factored into the mission equations
for success. Recognising the problem, the US has since embarked on fielding the
joint tactical radio system (JTRS), a software-defined radio (SDR) which uses the
wideband networking waveform (WNW) technique for harmonising joint services
usage of this technology. Any radio system wirelessly transmits/receives
signals in the radio frequency (RF) spectrum to facilitate the transfer of
information. The SDR is a very special kind of system in which the physical
layer functions are defined as software functionality, i.e., a software code
executes the role of a circuit board of the conventional radio and
software-based filtering algorithms are used for frequency selection. The
software generates the communications signal waveform, which is equivalent to a
modulated signal, making SDR capable of communicating over a large portion of
the spectrum whilst supporting multiple protocols. These software algorithms
are downloadable and adaptable over the lifespan of the hardware. Thus, the SDR
is a multi-mode, multi-band and multi-functional radio requiring only a
software upgrade for improvements, whereas traditional hardware-based radios
have cross-functionality limitations and can only be modified through physical
changes.
Another real force-multiplier that
enhances battlespace situational awareness by generating and disseminating a
common operational picture and improving the management of all linked
command-and-control/ISR networks is the versatile, modular and scalable,
multi-data-link processor (DLP) that can be configured/customised as required
by the end-user. When integrated with the CDL, the DLP, the result is a
network-centric suite that enables a seamless, configurable and expandable
integration of data-links on naval, ground-based and airborne platforms. The
DLP-CDL combination can thus be connected through an agnostic interface to
multiple hosts like land-based, shipborne and airborne command-and-control
centres in a way that facilitates network integration, as well as future
upgrades and maintenance requirements over time, thus reducing costs and risk. The
definition and design of any data-link architecture has to capture a wider
spectrum of operational contexts, functions and processes. It has also to be
synchronised across different services or units to achieve a degree of
integration and operational effectiveness. For example, an air-strike should
not result in fratricide and should not slow the advance of ground mechanised
units. Instead, the air-strike should reinforce and enhance the mobility of
friendly mechanised forces. In order to achieve this, both land and air
elements are required to share a common data-link capability. This common
capability provides ease of integration of all necessary force elements and
enables a shorter warfighting cycle to be achieved. Thus, the DLP-CDL
combination has to be engineered to support a very rich picture of the
battlespace and at the same time reduce the synchronisation time of all
warfighting elements.
In India’s case, adoption of the DLP-CDL
combination in future will be mandatory if the desired end-state is to achieve
joint service warfighting through the synchronisation of existing standalone
networks like the Indian Army’s Army Strategic Operational Information
Dissemination System (ASTROIDS) and its subordinate Command Information and
Decision Support System (CIDSS), the IA-owned ADC & RS, the Indian Navy’s NAVNET and multi-band LINK-II Mod-3 network, and the Indian Air
Force’s Integrated Air Command, Control and Communication System (IACCCS). This
is what should be the immediate point-of-focus when creating an IAF-led Unified
Air-Defence Command.