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The joint close air support (JCAS) community is struggling to
determine future close air support (CAS) employment tactics,
techniques, and procedures (TTPs). Since 1996, the JCAS community,
lead by an Office of the Secretary of Defense JCAS Joint Test
Force, has tried to improve JCAS by proposing changes in training,
doctrine, equipment and organization. Differing service
perspectives and the advent of new technologies make agreement on
necessary doctrinal changes tenuous. The primary question set out
in this thesis asks, Are the changes in terminal attack control
framework proposed in the draft JP 3-09.3 necessary and sufficient
for current and near future operations? The paper examines
contentious issues such as battlefield air interdiction (BAI), the
fire support coordination line (FSCL), CAS definitions, and the
purpose of maintaining separate categories of control. It then
structures a qualitative comparative analysis of the current and
proposed terminal attack control procedural frameworks based upon
the criteria of simplicity, completeness, and utility. The evidence
of this study suggests that proposed doctrinal changes are
necessary, but the overall utility of the draft terminal attack
control framework is not sufficient. This study makes five
recommendations for improvements in JCAS doctrine.
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Tinus Oberholzer, J.J. van Rensburg
Paperback
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R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
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