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In the Fall Air Power History magazine, which you Air Force types
can get from your unit historian, William Sayers wrote an article "The Red Baron Reports: What They Really Said". He looks at the now unclassified USAF Red Baron reports and tries to explain the disparity between USAF and USN/USMC kill ratios. One major point was that the AF for the most part had to go through longer routes that were not covered by US radars, while the Navy had cruisers just offshore to cover their routes. As proof of this he shows that when the US finally had TEABALL in place and while it was working, the AF kill ratio greatly improved to 4:1 for the first two months. He even correlates US losses to the times when TEABALL was not functioning. Another factor he points out is that the longer AF routes required flying at higher altitudes, where the VPAF GCI could pick them up earlier. This gave the VPAF more time to set up a higher percentage of kill intercept. The Navy could fly lower due to its shorter routes. Because of these factors, the VPAF put its best aircraft against the AF routes and maximized its AAA along the Navy routes. The Navy lost more aircraft to AAA than the AF did. The Navy only shot down 8 Mig-21s (one from a cruiser's missle) while the AF shot down 40. Joe |
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![]() "Joe Osman" wrote in message oups.com... In the Fall Air Power History magazine, which you Air Force types can get from your unit historian, William Sayers wrote an article "The Red Baron Reports: What They Really Said". He looks at the now unclassified USAF Red Baron reports and tries to explain the disparity between USAF and USN/USMC kill ratios. One major point was that the AF for the most part had to go through longer routes that were not covered by US radars, while the Navy had cruisers just offshore to cover their routes. As proof of this he shows that when the US finally had TEABALL in place and while it was working, the AF kill ratio greatly improved to 4:1 for the first two months. He even correlates US losses to the times when TEABALL was not functioning. Another factor he points out is that the longer AF routes required flying at higher altitudes, where the VPAF GCI could pick them up earlier. This gave the VPAF more time to set up a higher percentage of kill intercept. The Navy could fly lower due to its shorter routes. Because of these factors, the VPAF put its best aircraft against the AF routes and maximized its AAA along the Navy routes. The Navy lost more aircraft to AAA than the AF did. The Navy only shot down 8 Mig-21s (one from a cruiser's missle) while the AF shot down 40. Joe Kind of overlooks the fact that of the 1000's of sampans, junks, etc. that 100's of them had radios to provide early warnings to Hanoi. Also how about the ever present Russian trawlers that broadcast the news of every launch. Besides historians are always making up excuses as to why things happened the way they did. If they have to change a few things around to fit what they believe so be it. I will always believe that what happened in the early years was because there were still people in power in Naval Aviation that had a fighter/attack pilot mentality, as opposed to those in power in the AF which had been taken over by SAC thinking. |
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Oversimplification. First, the issue of transit time for USN strikes
versus AF--the carriers could launch and be to the target in Route Pack VI in less than 30 minutes. Most of that time would be overwater and at low to medium altitudes. Definitely a short available reaction time. Additionally, with few exceptions the Navy targeting trended to be coastal, even on those days that they went to Nam Dinh or Kep, they would still be able to get in and out in less than 30 minutes from feet dry. The AF used both overland and overwater approaches to targets in RP VI (as well as combinations--in by sea/out by Laos or vice-versa). We always used refueling on RP VI strikes (and that's not the 1000 pound post-launch taps on a buddy-tank that the Navy uses)--orbiting at 20K feet with twelve tankers or more, each with a flight of four sucking gas until drop-off time will provide a lot of early warning for interceptor launch. Probability that a surface sampan with a radio could transmit to a land-based GCI with early warning info is low--radar/radio horizon from surface runs about 20 miles. Integration of that kind of input assumes a technology level that probably wasn't likely at the time. But, I'll agree that the difference in training and doctrine between the services was significant regarding air/air. The Navy had the philosophy of specialization (F vs A tasking) while the USAF was a "jack-of-all-trades" concept. Navy had dedicated training in the fighter role while the AF chose to concentrate on ground attack with A/A as a corollary mission. Neither service had dissimilar A/A training and with the exception of the AF Fighter Weapons School and the USN Top Gun program, there were few highly trained air superiority folks. Further, the Navy's dual track initial training put jet guys into seats for a long time, while the USAF flawed concept of the "universally assignable" pilot meant a lot of unsuitable folks got funnelled into fighters from bombers, trainers, transports, etc, that didn't belong there. And, the Navy didn't lose more aircraft to AAA or any other cause--proportional losses (losses relative to sortie numbers flown) are largely parallel. |
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