Applying a methodology that is best described as "inductive
synthesis," this research paper, "Learning How to Fight Together:
The British Experience with Joint Air-Land Warfare," examines the
elusive quest for effective integration between air and land forces
in the context of joint operations. It draws on the British
experience from the first attempts to provide air support for land
operations in the First World War to contemporary operations in
Afghanistan. The study is reflective in nature. It is not meant to
be a detailed chronological account of every twist and turn in the
history of army-air co-operation between the British Army and the
Royal Air Force. It focuses on command and control issues and the
need, now as much as then, for air and land commanders to be in
each other's minds and plans from the outset. Both historical
examples and contemporary experiences are used to illustrate
enduring disagreements between soldiers and airmen over who should
control aircraft on and above the battlefield and what air forces
should do to assist the army in its operations. These two questions
have bedevilled successive generations of generals and air
marshals. Even when agreement has been reached on the operational
benefits to be had by the two services working together-as equals
and at all levels of command according to a common plan-effective
and long-lasting co-operation has been difficult and illusory.
Perhaps by taking another look at the historical struggle in
Britain to develop army-air co-operation, contemporary airmen and
soldiers on both sides of the Atlantic will be better equipped
conceptually to develop and deliver air-land integration that meets
their respective requirements in the complex operating environment
of today and tomorrow.
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