Marine Close Air Support In Korea 1950-1953
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Major Lynn A. Stover
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Marine Close Air Support In Korea 1950-1953 - Major Lynn A. Stover
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Text originally published in 2001 under the same title.
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We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
MARINE CLOSE AIR SUPPORT IN KOREA 1950-1953
BY
LYNN A. STOVER
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 4
About the Author 5
Acknowledgments 6
Abstract 7
Illustrations 8
Chapter 1—INTRODUCTION 9
Statement of the Research Question 9
Problem Background and Significance 10
Limitations of the Study 10
Definitions and Assumptions 10
Preview of the Argument 11
Chapter 2—CLOSE AIR SUPPORT IN WORLD WAR II 13
Introduction: Setting the Stage 13
World War II and CAS Doctrine 15
Airpower Employment Priorities 16
The Organization of CAS Assets 22
The Means and Effectiveness of Command and Control (C2): 24
The Aircraft Basing Debate 27
Summary 27
Chapter 3—CLOSE AIR SUPPORT IN THE KOREAN WAR 29
Introduction: Between World War II and the Korean War 29
The Korean War and Close Air Support Doctrine 33
Airpower Employment Priorities in Korea 35
Service Air Philosophies in Korea 43
Organization of CAS Assets 45
The Means and Effectiveness of Command and Control (C2): 60
The Aircraft Basing Debate: 68
Summary 72
Chapter 4—CLOSE AIR SUPPORT OPERATIONS AFTER THE KOREAN WAR 76
Introduction 76
Vietnam and CAS Doctrine Refined 76
Air Power Priorities 80
Organization of CAS Assets 84
Means and Effectiveness of Command and Control 86
Basing in Vietnam 89
Chapter 5—CONCLUSION 91
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 93
Bibliography 95
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Major Lynn Stover was born in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania in 1959. He graduated high School at Bellefonte Pennsylvania in 1977. In August of 1982, Major Stover earned a degree in General Studies with a Political Science emphasis from Lock Haven University. In 1984 he enlisted in the Marine Corps and was assigned to duty in Okinawa, Japan, as a Stinger Gunner. Major Stover, selected in 1986 for the Enlisted Commissioning Program, was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in April 1987. After attending The Basic School, Major Stover was assigned to Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, South Carolina, for duty as an Air Defense Control Officer. In 1991, Major Stover attended and graduated from the Naval Fighter Weapons School (Top Gun) and in the spring of 1992 attended and graduated from the Marine Weapons and Tactics Instructor Course (WTI). In 1992 Major Stover was assigned to Marine Tactical Air Command Squadron, Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, North Carolina as an Air Defense Coordinator and Data Link Interface Coordination Officer. In 1994, he was selected to attend the Amphibious Warfare School at Marine Corps Base, Quantico, Virginia. He graduated the following year and transferred to Marine Corps Communication and Electronics Schools (MCCES) located at Twenty-nine Palms, California. Upon arrival at MCCES Major Stover was attached to MCCES, Air Schools, Company C and assumed the duties as the Air Defense Training Officer and Company Executive Officer. He attended National University San Diego and received a Master of Arts in Management with distinction in 1997. In 1998, Major Stover was assigned to Marine Unmanned Vehicle Squadron 1 (VMU-1) as the Operations Officer. In 1999 Major Stover attended Air Command and Staff College (ACSC), Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Alabama, and subsequently attended the School of Advanced Airpower Studies after graduating from ACSC. He is currently assigned to the Second Marine Expeditionary Forces, Command Element, Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I would like to acknowledge several people without whose help I would have never been able to complete this work. I want to thank Patricia Mullins, Belinda Kelly, and the staff at the Marine Corps University Archives for their help and dedication in supporting my research and investigation. These men and women took time out of their extremely busy schedules to give me information and insight into my work.
I especially would like to thank Doctor David R. Mets for his guidance and wisdom as my research advisor. I could always count on his candid and wise counsel to guide my effort. I would also like to thank Colonel Wray Johnson for his detailed attention to my work. His pep talks motivated me when I was not certain I would complete this project. These two men deserve a medal for their patience in guiding me through this process. Doctor Mets and Colonel Johnson are both scholars and teachers of the highest caliber and I am a better man for having known them.
I want to thank my wife Susan and our children, Kyle, Olivia, and Luke for their understanding and support throughout this year of study. Sue was a saint for putting up with me over the course of this year. I was little more than a piece of furniture in our house, always with a book in hand or at the computer pecking away. She made certain to take care of our children and the house when I was of little help or use. Thank you, Sue.
ABSTRACT
This study examines the historical record and primary source of conflict between the armed services over the issue of the effective employment of close air support during the Korean War. The study considers the impact of the single air asset manager on CAS employment during World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. The disagreement examined and explained in this study is the distinction and desire between the Navy-Marines control system and the Army-Air Force control system. The author evaluates the development of service and joint doctrine and the arguments over centralized and decentralized command and control in the execution of the air war. The thesis emphasizes CAS issues during the Korean War using General Keith B. McCutcheon’s writings and papers as a guide to develop and understand CAS employment, methodology, and effectiveness from World War II through Vietnam. The Korean War period significantly shaped the persistent argument concerning CAS employment among Marines, sailors, airmen, and soldiers and its value to a winning strategy. This study emphasizes General McCutcheon views on CAS employment and how he provided a template for cooperation during the Philippines Campaign. Cooperation and coordination as well as the role of doctrine are the primary themes throughout this study. Doctrine, and coordination and cooperation are necessary tools to develop the most effective means of employing CAS.
The most important thing in any of the cases studied was not which system was used for close support but that the system had to satisfy three minimum requirements for adequate CAS: 1) The system must permit the battalion commander to request emergency air support directly from the control center; 2) it must provide for the availability of aircraft over the target area within minutes; and 3) it must provide a competent air controller in a forward observation post where he can see friendly front lines, the aircraft, and the target to direct a strike to occur generally at a range of 50 to 500 yards from friendly lines. The secret to successfully achieving these three requirements in CAS operations is teamwork, coordination, and determination to make the system work. The level of commitment at the highest level of command, down the chain, weighs heavy on success or failure. While doctrine plays a critical role in focusing direction and effort, the situations will influence the application of doctrine.
ILLUSTRATIONS
Figure 1. Army-Air Force Control System Southwest Pacific 1944
Figure 2. Navy-Marine Control System Southwest Pacific 1944
Figure 3. Joint Policy Agreement for Control of Aircraft Operating over Korea
Figure 4. Navy-Marine Control System Close Air Support Architecture during Amphibious operations Korea
Figure 5. Army-Air Force Control System Close Air Support Architecture during operations in Korea
Figure 6. Navy-Marine Request Procedures Korea
Figure 7. Navy-Marine Execution Procedures Korea
Figure 8. Army-Air Force Request Procedures Korea
Figure 9. Army-Air Force Execution Procedures Korea
Figure 10. Air Ground System US & Vietnamese 1968
Figure 11. Navy-Marine (III MAF) Air-Ground Control System
CHAPTER 1—INTRODUCTION
It is fully realized that the only excuse for aviation in any service is its usefulness in assisting the troops on the ground to successfully carry out their operations.
—Major Alfred A. Cunningham, Marine Aviator number 1 Value of Aviation to the Marine Corps
, Marine Corps Gazette September 1920.
Marine aviation has one mission...that is to support the ground elements of the FMF.
—Major General Keith B. McCutcheon, April 1969
Statement of the Research Question
The quotations above give some indication of the depth of commitment of the U.S. Marine Corps for aviation in the close air support mission. In the following chapters, I will examine that portion of Marine Corps history concerning the development of close air support (CAS) doctrine. The purpose of this study is to examine the historical record in terms of the development of Marine philosophy regarding CAS, and the conflict that arose among the armed services over the effective employment of CAS during the Korean War. I will also examine the development and impact of the single air manager, or Joint Force Air Component Commander (JFACC), on CAS employment. The controversy arose from the purported effectiveness of Marine CAS versus the alleged ineffective support provided by the U.S. Air Force. With Korea as a backdrop, I will examine and explain the Marine perspective on CAS and the distinction between the Marines and the Navy, the Air Force, and the Army in that regard.
In general, I will focus on the Marines’ application of CAS from World War II to the Vietnam War; however, my emphasis will be on CAS during the Korean War. The examination of World War II will focus mainly on the Southwest Pacific Theater rather than the war in Europe. The intent is not to diminish the lessons of the war in Europe, but rather to focus on the Marine experience, which took place in the Pacific theater. By looking at World War II, I will establish the context for the doctrinal development of CAS as applied later in Korea. Then I will examine CAS in Vietnam. I will examine the extent to which the services reached a doctrinal solution concerning CAS and the single air asset manager.
The Korean War shaped the persistent argument concerning CAS employment among Marines, sailors, airmen, and soldiers regarding its value to a winning strategy. This study will explore the impact that General Keith B. McCutcheon, United States Marine Corps, had on CAS employment during the Korean War and how he influenced the CAS argument overall. I will discuss the evolution of General McCutcheon’s views on CAS from World War II through the Vietnam War. The emphasis on his views across three decades provides a Marine practitioner’s perspective regarding the CAS mission. My intent is to contrast McCutcheon’s views on the most effective use of CAS with those views