Dear Members and Friends,
In the blistering Oklahoma heat of Fort Sill, several
thousand United States Army soldiers in the 6th and 31st Air Defense Brigades
train daily to protect and defend air space of up to 10,000 feet above the deployed,
forward United States military operating bases. This training focuses on
the critical defense against the number one killer of U.S. soldiers deployed
today in Afghanistan and Iraq: mortars and rockets. It also involves
defending U.S. bases from unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), cruise missiles,
aircraft, and ballistic missiles. Ballistic missiles in particular are
deployed in substantial numbers in countries like North Korea and Iran directly
threatening U.S. bases in South Korea, Japan, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and
the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
These mobile defensive systems being trained at Fort Sill
can operate in all types of weather and terrain; they can be air-lifted to
protect and supplement movements of U.S. troops anywhere in the world. The
critical technical component of these systems is their complete integration
within a command and control structure that can quickly access a threat and
then track and target it to provide the best interceptor to negate it. This
process becomes even more complicated considering the many objects that could
be identified as threats by the multiple defensive systems at hand.
The short ranges and multiple firings demonstrated by Iran
earlier this month, illustrate that decisions by the soldiers trained at Fort
Sill, aided by processors linked into sensors and shooters, have to be made in
seconds. Thus the air picture has to be defined and shared quickly in the Army,
between the U.S. Joint Services and Coalition Partners, linking all of their defensive
systems together in a “system of systems”. This “system of systems” is
the biggest need, requirement, and concern to be able to protect of our forces
and allies. There is no substitute, as the limitations of the existing
antiquated system cannot provide the broadband width for data in addition to
integrating firing solutions. This action must come with a joint military
common command and control structure to allow the benefit of force
multiplication of these defensive assets rather than the current practice of
single units fighting with closed architectures.
Capability gaps remain within the air defense needs for the
United States war fighters, especially the need for more deployed theater and
regional sensors and shooters. These gaps need to be addressed adequately
in order to fully deter and defend against multiple raids of missiles, like
those demonstrated by Iran and North Korea, but also against the mortar and
rocket attacks on our forward operating bases that don't have C-RAM defenses.
Another notable missing capability within the Army air defense is the absence
of a sole cruise missile and unmanned aircraft defense system. This
capability gap needs to be addressed before further unmanned aircraft
proliferation by other countries and non-state actors that would threaten the
United States. The responsibility to adequately defend our forces and allies is
critical to stabilize crisis regions of the world and to ultimately enable
peace.
Beyond the 31st ADA Brigade, which is the most modernized
Air Defense Brigade in the world that deploys regularly to the Middle East from
Fort Sill, Oklahoma, the United States missile defense school also houses the
6th ADA Brigade at Fort Sill, which is home to each and every new U.S. Air
Defense soldier who must train on the current U.S. Army air defense systems:
The Patriot System (Ballistic Missile Defense)
The Avenger System (Aircraft Defense)
The C-RAM and Sentinel System (Rocket, Artillery and Mortar
Defense)
The JLENS System (Land Based blimp-like Sensor)
Missing from the 6th Brigade school (but soon to be
incorporated) are the THAAD and AN/TPY-2 defensive radars. One of the biggest
issues and challenges the Army faces with training of the Patriot-3 and the
THAAD systems is not having enough of the actual equipment because it is so needed
in the combat commanders’ regions, and there are so few of the systems being
made. There is no substitute for hands on training; both THAAD and Patriot-3
need to be placed at Fort Sill. Without trained soldiers these systems
cannot function. However, iPhone applications are being used to
supplement the training of these systems at Fort Sill, highlighting the U.S.
Army’s innovation in training programs.
The 6th ADA Brigade is also home to the International School
of Air Defense Artillery. Over 30 allied countries participate in training at
Fort Sill; Germany and the Persian Gulf countries have an especially high level
of representation.
We are eternally grateful as a nation and humbled by the
unrecognized valor of those soldiers from Fort Sill that save lives of soldiers
and make our world a safer place.
MDAA was very fortunate to have the honor to be with these
men and women of our nation's military at the Missile Defense school house at
Fort Sill, Oklahoma last week. For more photos of MDAA's visit to Fort Sill, click here
Respectfully,

Riki Ellison
Chairman & Founder
Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance