Gulf War Air Power Survey Volume Iii Logistics And Support

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Gulf War Air Power Survey

Author : Eliot A. Cohen
Publisher : Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Page : 786 pages
File Size : 43,8 Mb
Release : 2012-06-27
Category : Electronic
ISBN : 1478146656

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Gulf War Air Power Survey by Eliot A. Cohen Pdf

This report discusses logistics in the Persian Gulf war as it applies to all military operations and in particular to air operations. Simply put, how did the United States equip its forces for Desert Shield and Desert Storm? Logistics also includes fictions for maintaining an air base and support services. These aspects of logistics will be covered in the two parts of this volume.

Gulf War Air Power Survey. Volume III. Logistics and Support

Author : Anonim
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 297 pages
File Size : 54,8 Mb
Release : 1993
Category : Electronic
ISBN : OCLC:1031386797

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Gulf War Air Power Survey. Volume III. Logistics and Support by Anonim Pdf

From 16 January through 28 February 1991, the United States and its allies conducted one of the most operationally successful wars in history, a conflict in which air operations played a preeminent role. The Gulf War Air Power Survey was commissioned on 22 August 1991 to review all aspects of air warfare in the Persian Gulf for use by the United States Air Force. The Survey has produced reports on planning, the conduct of operations, the effects of the air campaign, command and control, logistics, air base support, space, weapons and tactics, as well as a chronology and a compendium of statistics on the war. The Survey was just that, an attempt to provide a comprehensive and documented account of the war. It is not a definitive history: that will await the passage of time and the opening of sources, that were not available to Survey researchers. Nor is it a summary of lessons learned. It concentrates on an analysis of the operational level of war in the belief that this level of warfare is at once one of the most difficult to characterize and one of the most important to understand. This volume concentrates on direct as well as indirect support required to conduct air operations. The first report, Logistics, is primarily concerned with overall logistics planning, supply and maintenance of the force, and its transportation necessary for war. The second report, Support, concerns itself with the air base and airbase operations (e.g., civil engineering, services, and personnel). This is the dual theme of the volume.

Gulf War Air Power Survey, V. 3: Logistics and Support

Author : Richard L. Olson,Cohen, Eliot
Publisher : Government Printing Office
Page : 790 pages
File Size : 40,8 Mb
Release : 2024-07-02
Category : Persian Gulf War, 1991
ISBN : 0160872839

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Gulf War Air Power Survey, V. 3: Logistics and Support by Richard L. Olson,Cohen, Eliot Pdf

This volume consists of two reports and concentrates on direct as well as indirect support required to conduct air operations. The first report, Logistics, discusses logistics in the Persian Gulf War as it applies to all military operations and in particular to air operations. Includes functions for maintaining an air base and support services. The second report, Support, concerns itself with the air base and airbase operations (e.g., civil engineering, services, and personnel). This is the dual theme of the volume.

Gulf War Air Power Survey

Author : Anonim
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 996 pages
File Size : 43,7 Mb
Release : 1993
Category : Persian Gulf War, 1991
ISBN : UOM:39015032935671

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Gulf War Air Power Survey by Anonim Pdf

Gulf War Air Power Survey: Logistics and support

Author : Eliot A. Cohen
Publisher : Government Printing Office
Page : 786 pages
File Size : 54,5 Mb
Release : 1993
Category : Persian Gulf War, 1991
ISBN : 0160429110

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Gulf War Air Power Survey: Logistics and support by Eliot A. Cohen Pdf

Eliot Cohen directed the 5 volume survey. Richard L. Olson, et al. authored this V. 3. Consists of two reports. The first report, Logistics, discusses logistics in the Persian Gulf War as it applies to all military operations and in particular to air operations. Includes functions for maintaining an air base and support services. The second report, Support, captures and tells the stories of functional support areas. Focuses on those support areas that project air power.

Gulf War Air Power Survey

Author : Thomas A. Keaney,Eliot A. Cohen
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 296 pages
File Size : 40,6 Mb
Release : 1993
Category : Government publications
ISBN : UCR:31210023608639

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Gulf War Air Power Survey by Thomas A. Keaney,Eliot A. Cohen Pdf

Gulf War Air Power Survey

Author : Eliot A. Cohen
Publisher : Ross & Perry Incorporated
Page : 786 pages
File Size : 43,5 Mb
Release : 2001-06-01
Category : History
ISBN : 1931641072

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Gulf War Air Power Survey by Eliot A. Cohen Pdf

Gulf War Air Power Survey: Operations and effects and effectiveness

Author : Thomas A. Keaney,Eliot A. Cohen
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 833 pages
File Size : 41,5 Mb
Release : 1993
Category : Persian Gulf War, 1991
ISBN : 0160429102

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Gulf War Air Power Survey: Operations and effects and effectiveness by Thomas A. Keaney,Eliot A. Cohen Pdf

Eliot Cohen directed the 5 volume survey. Williamson Murray, et al. authored this V. 2. Consists of 2 reports. The 1st report, Operations, focuses on the employment of air power as part of the Coalition's military efforts to destroy Iraq's military forces and potential, and to liberate Kuwait. Examines objectives and dissects problems associated with air operations. The 2d report, Effects and Effectiveness, by Barry Watts. et al., surveys the accomplishments of Coalition air power at the operational level relative to the military and political objectives for which the war was fought.

Gulf War Air Power Survey: Weapons, tactics, and training and space operations

Author : Eliot A. Cohen
Publisher : Department of the Air Force
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 42,8 Mb
Release : 1994
Category : Persian Gulf War, 1991
ISBN : 0160429277

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Gulf War Air Power Survey: Weapons, tactics, and training and space operations by Eliot A. Cohen Pdf

Eliot Cohen directed the 5 volume survey. Richard J. Blanchfield, et al. authored this V. 4. Consists of two reports. The first report, Weapons, Tactics, and Training, focuses on the impact of these three elements on the application of air power projected by the United States and Coalition forces in the Gulf War. The second report, Space Operations, was classified and reduced to a three page precis. Examines the planning and training for the use of space systems, space mobilization, military utility, command and control, and the role of commercial space systems and receiver equipment.

Gulf War Air Power Survey

Author : U.s. Air Force,Office of Air Force History
Publisher : Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Page : 296 pages
File Size : 47,9 Mb
Release : 2015-02-21
Category : History
ISBN : 1508562083

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Gulf War Air Power Survey by U.s. Air Force,Office of Air Force History Pdf

From 16 January through 28 February 1991, the United States and its allies conducted one of the most operationally successful wars in history, a conflict in which air operations played a preeminent role. The Gulf War Air Power Survey was commissioned on 22 August 1991 to reviewall aspects of air warfare in the Persian Gulf for use by the United States Air Force, but it was not to confine itself to discussion of that institution.The Survey has produced reports on planning, the conduct of operations, the effects of the air campaign, command and control, logistics, air basesupport, space, weapons and tactics, as well as a chronology and a compendium of statistics on the war. It has prepared as well a summary report and some shorter papers and assembled an archive composed of paper, microfilm, and electronic records, all of which have been deposited at the Air Force Historical Research Agency at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama. The Survey was just that, an attempt to provide a comprehensive and documented account of the war. It is not a definitive history: that will await the passage of time and the opening of sources (Iraqi records, for example) that were not available to Survey researchers. Nor is it a summary of lessons learned: other organizations, including many within the Air Force, have already done that. Rather, the Survey provides an analytical and evidentiary point of departure for future studies of the air campaign. It concentrates oil an analysis of the operational level of war in the belief that this level of warfare is at once one of the most difficult to characterize and one of the most important to understand. The Survey was directed by Dr. Eliot Cohen of Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies and was staffed by a mixture of civilian and military analysts, including retired officers from the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps. It was divided into task forces, most of which were run by civilians working temporarily for the Air Force. The work produced by the Survey was examined by a distinguished review committee, which included scholars, retired general officers from the Air Force, Navy, and Army, as well as former and current senior government officials. Throughout, the Survey strived to conduct its research in a spirit of impartiality and scholarly rigor. Its members had as their standard the observation of Mr. Franklin D'Olier, chairman of the United States Strategic Bombing Survey during and after the second World War: "We wanted to bum into everybody's souls that fact that the survey's responsibility... was to ascertain facts and to seek truth, eliminating completely any preconceived theories or dogmas."The Survey attempted to create a body of data common to all of the reports. Because one group of researchers compiled this core material while other task forces were researching and drafting other, more narrowly focused studies, it is possible that discrepancies exist among the reportswith regard to points of detail. More importantly, authors were given discretion, within the bounds of evidence and plausibility, to interpret events as they saw them. In some cases, task forces came to differing conclusions about particular aspects of this war. Such divergences of view were expected and even desired: the Survey was intended to serve as a point of departure for those who read its reports, and not their analytical terminus.

The Future of Air Power in the Aftermath of the Gulf War

Author : Robert L. Pfaltzgraff,Richard H. Shultz
Publisher : DIANE Publishing
Page : 387 pages
File Size : 50,8 Mb
Release : 1992
Category : Air power
ISBN : 9781428992818

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The Future of Air Power in the Aftermath of the Gulf War by Robert L. Pfaltzgraff,Richard H. Shultz Pdf

This collection of essays reflects the proceedings of a 1991 conference on "The United States Air Force: Aerospace Challenges and Missions in the 1990s," sponsored by the USAF and Tufts University. The 20 contributors comment on the pivotal role of airpower in the war with Iraq and address issues and choices facing the USAF, such as the factors that are reshaping strategies and missions, the future role and structure of airpower as an element of US power projection, and the aerospace industry's views on what the Air Force of the future will set as its acquisition priorities and strategies. The authors agree that aerospace forces will be an essential and formidable tool in US security policies into the next century. The contributors include academics, high-level military leaders, government officials, journalists, and top executives from aerospace and defense contractors.

Gulf War Air Power Survey

Author : Thomas A. Keaney,Eliot A. Cohen
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 43,6 Mb
Release : 1993
Category : Persian Gulf War, 1991
ISBN : LCCN:93030601

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Gulf War Air Power Survey by Thomas A. Keaney,Eliot A. Cohen Pdf

Gulf War Air Power Survey

Author : Office of Air Force History,United States Air Force
Publisher : CreateSpace
Page : 828 pages
File Size : 52,6 Mb
Release : 2015-02-23
Category : History
ISBN : 1508563047

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Gulf War Air Power Survey by Office of Air Force History,United States Air Force Pdf

In many ways "Desert Storm" represents a watershed in history; for much of the war, it consisted entirely of the application of massive doses of air power to the economic and bureaucratic infrastructure of Iraq and its military forces. How the Coalition applied air power differed greatly from previous wars in which air forces had played major roles. In this case, air power proved itself capable of use as both a rapier-like instrument and as a bludgeon. By itself, the air campaign achieved considerable effects on the Iraqi military, its infrastructure, its command and control, and even the political stability of the Bathist tyranny. Yet many things remain unclear about the campaign's impact on Iraq. Even the question of how many tanks, armored personnel carriers, artillery pieces, and other numerical indices of military power the campaign destroyed or damaged is open to dispute. As for the impact of air power on Iraq's military system, its military industrial complex, and even the regime itself, much of that remains opaque. Nevertheless, even with the imponderables the air campaign suggests that the military balance between air and ground has changed in fundamental ways. Bernard Trainor, the former Marine Corps general, former New York Times military correspondent and current professor at the JFK School of Government at Harvard, underlined that shift in a lecture to the Naval War College in October 1991. He noted that for the first time in history the ground campaign had supported the air campaign. This study focuses on the air war's operational conduct against Iraq and its military forces. For our purposes, the USAF's 1992 basic doctrinal manual provides a useful definition of "operational art," the focus of this report: Operational art. The employment of military forces to attain strategic or operational objectives in a theater of war or in a theater of operations through the design, organization, and conduct of campaigns and major operations: Operational art translates theater strategy into operational and, ultimately, tactical action. This report, consequently, focuses on the employment of air power as a part of Coalition military efforts to destroy Iraq's military forces and potential, and to liberate Kuwait. Within that framework, the air campaign attempted a wide variety of objectives. This apparent diversion of effort reflected both the enonnous resources mobilized in the Gulf by the Coalition and fears of military commanders that the Iraqis would exit the war at an early point, thereby preserving much of their military power.