Posted on Jul 12, 2015
CPO Gregory Smith
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Is the airborne concept outdated? In almost 14 years of war has there been any parachute deployments of troops into a combat zone?
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SSG Squad Leader
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The airorne concept is definitely outdated. The whole idea of jumping in to secure an objective such as an airfield is still something we need. I totally agree with COL Williams thought of not haveng MP Brigades and such not on jump status. There is no need for someone to tell me that I am falling too fast and give me a ticket. LOL. It;s just like saying that the air assault concept is outdated. Things are never outdated, but may need to be adjusted slightly.
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PVT Raymond Lopez
PVT Raymond Lopez
7 y
Personally I look at the Military Police as the "OTHER" Cavalry Regiment!!!
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SFC Jon Vandeyacht
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I have been both airborne and air assault. I have been to Iraq 3 times. I have done multiple airmobile missions and zero airborne missions. Until we are looking at a real force on force battle, i feel there is no real need of airborne. I like the drops of equipment but that is all. My airborne brothers will disavow me for that statement but it costs tons of training dollars and isnt used. I see it as a serious waste of tax dollars. Im sorry fellow airborners, now that im out of the jet wash, i see the truth.
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SGT William Howell
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Oh yeah there has been. I was in Iraq in 2013 when the 82nd did a jump in Northern Iraq. Yes the same area that had been under coalition control for months so they could secure an airfield that was pretty much already secured. If you look it up on Wikipedia it is much more exciting than my version. More interesting was nobody on that jump got a CIB to go with the mustard stain.
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SGT William Howell
SGT William Howell
9 y
First off there Bob, slow your roll. The proper noun Afghanistan never left my mouth. I was actually in Iraq when this went down, were you? I had people I worked directly with that were actually there. Second, That whole AO was owned by the 82nd and the 173rd WAS under the 82nd, as in they were patched to them, along with the 503rd, 10th Group (for this operation), and a dozen other little players in support rolls. Third, The Rangers were were not there on this part of this mission.

I am not trying to regurgitate a report from a unit website, I am telling you the way it went down as it was told to me by someone that was standing there watching the jump from a secured airfield. Not sure where you got your Special Forces information decoder ring to gather info about a couple A- Teams from the 10th taking an entire airfield. Oh they were there, they walked right in and set up some bunks (Right next to my buddies who had been there training police officers for months.) they were waiting for the rest of the guys to jump in. Not sure that counts as "capturing it". (It would be like me "capturing" a chicken sandwich.) The jump zone was secured and had been for months by multi-national unit and was held before that by the Kurd's for several years so Saddam could not use it to drop mustard gas on the north. The jump was not even classified as a combat jump until someone higher up thought it would be cool to have a mustard stain.
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SGT William Howell
SGT William Howell
9 y
Maj Richard "Ernie" Rowlette Thank you, Sir. I still think that there is a need for Airborne and with the way things are going in Russia/Ukraine people may recognize that is what they are there for.

Besides Jump Wings are cool!
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SPC Anthony Martin
SPC Anthony Martin
9 y
I'm a believer of Army traditions and the history of the paratrooper, however as long as I have been a 11B light infantryman I don't see the need for the airborne drops except for supplies. I'm not trying to put them down because I have great admiration for the paratrooper, I just think the insertion of the paratrooper has gone away from that concept. I haven't witnessed an Airborne drop into the combat zone ever since I have been in the Army. Although I only have been deployed to Iraq once.....
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SGT William Howell
SGT William Howell
9 y
SPC Anthony Martin I agree in this day and age there is no need for Airborne Troops, hell, we can't even tell who the enemy is or what their name is (Taliban, ISIL,ISIS, insurgent). There may be a need in the future. Russia is flexing it.s muscles again and is looking to land grab (Georgia, Ukraine). China's economy just tanked. All signs that Airborne is still a very real force multiplier.
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LTC Special Operations Response Team (Sort)
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Large Daytime airborne/ parachute operations without pre DZ preparations are largely impractical. A handful of soldiers with basic rifles could wipe out a hundred men by simple sniping during a daytime ops.
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SGT Edward Thomas
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Yes Chief there has been. Iraq and Afghanistan I believe have both had combat jumps. Look up the Ranger battalions and 173rd Airborne Brigade
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SPC Indirect Fire Infantryman (Mortarman)
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Airborne has been used in OEF and OIF, and quite effective.
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SGT Dee Stanley
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If we hadnt had good relations with other Countries in the region, many troops in the initial assault of Afghanistan would have had to have been inserted by parachute. It still remains a viable insertion method and I believe all BCT's should have an integrated Airborne element. If we were to go into Syria, we would need a huge Airborne Op. There is no better way of getting into hostile areas quietly until we come up with a quieter helo. We currently rely on speed to get us into combat but sometimes when you are inserting a large force speed isnt what you need, its quiet. unless you come up with a way to overthrow the compromise that is needed between stealth and speed, we will always need it. Just so you know, there have been a few operations in the recent history, I know at least a few guys with Combat Jumps. http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/airborne4.htm
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COL Strategic Plans Chief
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I posted the same question about 2 weeks ago in the general military forum citing this new article from CSI.

http://usacac.army.mil/node/936

Before going any further down this road in dialog, I recommend everyone read it and see if your opinion still stands.
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SSG Robert Webster
SSG Robert Webster
9 y
LTC Halvorson, Before I get too far into the paper, could you tell me if this is a rehash of Dr. DeVore's 2004 paper - "The Airborne Illusion: Institutions and the Evolution of Postwar Airborne Forces"? Though I understand that the author has a doctorate in political science, is this a well reasoned and thought out piece of writing or is it a political hack job like his 2004 paper? The reason that I state political hack job is that the titles and the conclusions offered indicate this. These two papers and others like it also have a counterpart with papers written about the usefulness and cost effectiveness of Marine or Naval Infantry.

I have been reading papers, articles and books on this particular subject since 1976, and I see no or very little change on either side. I may be a bit bias in my opinion, but it bothers me that individuals like this both inside and outside the military establishment appear to have more of a voice than their opposite counterparts.
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COL Strategic Plans Chief
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It's a lot of the same. His argument starts that it is an outdated concept and that the only reason it's still around is that the airborne had institutional momentum and that specifically in america, it's still around because they have changed the mission they are supposed to perform. The brits are down to a battalion because they didn't have the support necessary to "old-boy" cub it into the military, and the soviets/russia still have them in mass despite their horrible track record because it was created as a separate military arm...thus giving it massive amounts of staying power. Not sure how political hackiness is involved. Seems well researched, if not one sided.
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PFC (Non-Rated)
PFC (Join to see)
9 y
This is the problem with the conventional mind set of many commanders today. Too much risk and too many assets dedicated to an infiltration technique they don't understand. Airborne operations in modern warfare should be focused on company or smaller elements except for Joint Forced Entry operations that usually occur at the start of a conflict. The good 'ol boy club of that still believes in the heroic and romantic notion of the division combat jump needs to die off and make way for the modern airborne concept.
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LTC Robert McKenna
LTC Robert McKenna
9 y
Thanks for the link!!

While I believe there is truth to some of Dr. Devore thesis, like most historians he tends to over focus on a small subset of operations (WWII, US, UK, and German operations to prove his point. This view is a little narrow, and doesn't include any follow on of analysis of the 300+ combat/operations jumps that have been conducted since September 1945 (http://kdcnova.com/CJR_2013_Files/Combat_Jump_Record_03.07.2013.pdf), most of which were not conducted by the US/UK/USSR/Germany.

There is a place for the capability, but like any capability it needs to be employed in the correct circumstance. I believe we did that at the early stages of OEF/OIF, and obviously the French have done that to good effect in the Africa recently. As a combat operations area becomes more mature (think helicopters and their refueling locations) the opportunities to insert by parachute vice other means of envelopment naturally lessen. (Though, I might argue that there were likely instances in Afghanistan over the last few years where the US might have achieved better tactical surprise by using airborne forces staged from outside the battle area, than was achieved by conducting air assault from established bases in country.)

Ditto on the comments from the COL on this page, there is likely not a requirement to keep nearly as many CS/CSS units on full jump status.
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SSG Eric Trace
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Out dated perhaps, but what we must keep in mind, just because we have been fighting on type of war recently, doesn't mean that is all we will be fighting. A revamping of the types of personnel, types of equipment that can and should be dropped is what is needed. I thought when the Force 21 concept was brought into play all of this was being addressed?
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COL Strategic Plans Chief
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Look at the article I posted. It lays all of this out. Even with a force 21 concept, in a conventional war, it is folly to 1) attempt to fly slow moving planes over enemy held territory, and 2) once on the ground...the likelyhood of success is minimal.
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PFC (Non-Rated)
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Likelihood of success is minimal? According to who?
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SPC Daniel Edwards
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Apparently there was a debate about this in an article a while back. Someone up high believed at the time that Airborne qualification is not as elite as it used to be. Back when it was created, it was to get soldiers far, far behind enemy lines and only a select few had the ability to do it. With the use of helicopters, this article said, anyone could reach a remote point.
Another thing to consider is the injury rate of Airborne qualified service members. I have yet to see someone who is Airborne qualified that does not have severe medical problems related to jumping in some degree. In my last unit, I had some PT studs that could max out on every exercise you could throw at them - except running. Their busted up knees from all the jumps were the reason most fell out of runs. Note: I say most because there were a few that could manage it but not many.
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