1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910163327003321

Autore

Towe Major James A.

Titolo

Eliminating Fratricide From Attack Helicopter Fires : an Army aviator's perspective / / Major James A. Towe

Pubbl/distr/stampa

[San Francisco] : , : Pickle Partners Publishing, , 2014

ISBN

1-78289-682-1

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource

Disciplina

355.422

Soggetti

Attack helicopters

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Contents --TABLE OF CONTENTS 4 -- ABSTRACT 5 -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 6 -- LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS 7 --CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION 10 --CHAPTER 2 - REVIEW OF LITERATURE 14 -- CHAPTER 3 - RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 20 -- CHAPTER 4 - HISTORICAL ANALYSIS 30 --CHAPTER 5 - ATTACK HELICOPTER FRATRICIDE -- ANALYSIS 44 -- Vietnam 44 -- Attack Helicopter Modernization 52 -- Grenada 53 -- The Advanced Attack Helicopter 54 -- Panama 56  -- Southwest Asia 60 -- CHAPTER 6 - CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 73 -- Postscript 78 -- REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 81 --BIBLIOGRAPHY 82 --Books 82 --Periodicals and Articles 83 --Government Documents 85 --Unpublished Materials 87.

Sommario/riassunto

In the aftermath of the euphoria brought on by our military victory in the Persian Gulf War, is the realization that we still have much to learn. The Persian Gulf War appears to have validated the quality of U.S. doctrine, leadership and military prowess. It showcased the technical superiority of our equipment, and confirmed under fire the courage and competence of our soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines. Yet, even in an overwhelming victory there are painfully hard lessons to be learned, or in the case of fratricide, relearned. Perhaps no other aspect of our failures strike the military psyche harder than fratricide. This study will suggest that we do not have to accept the fratricide statistics of the past, however factual, as inevitable of future U.S. conflicts. It will propose that the facts of fratricide should be gathered not as a casualty prediction planning tool, but as a focus to design training and



operational procedures, which in conjunction with advanced technology will work towards the significant reduction if not the elimination of fratricide from attack helicopter fires.