JTF East - UNPROFOR History
Transcription
JTF East - UNPROFOR History
EASTERN ALLURE The US looks east as defence transformation in Europe gathers momentum. Jim Dorschner reports A new task force for Eastern Europe, which is directly linked with the transformation of the US Army into a lighter, more expeditionary service, has been established in the Balkans. General James Jones, the NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) and the US European Command (USEUCOM) Commander, has said that Joint Task Force East (JTF-E) will “significantly increase” the ability of US and allied forces to co-ordinate and conduct training and operations in Eurasia and the Caucasus and permit a quicker response “to areas of contention before they become areas of crises”. The complex process of US defence trans- BRF_JDW_22.11.indd 2 ● US military strategists expect the JTF-E to play a key role in crisis prevention ● Base agreements with Bulgaria and Romania will offer US forces far greater training opportunities compared to restrictions currently faced in Germany and Italy ● New US bases along the Black Sea will provide much improved access for deployments into Central Asia, the Middle East and Southwest Asia formation in Europe tangibly advanced in December 2005 and April 2006 when Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sat down with counterparts in Bucharest and Sofia to sign formal bilateral basing and access agreements with Romania and Bulgaria. Active planning to implement the agreements had been underway for some time at the headquarters of USEUCOM in Stuttgart, with much of the responsibility now falling to the gaining command, US Army Europe (USAREUR) in Heidelberg. The original force structure concept envisioned an Eastern European Task Force (EETF), mimicking the Southern European Task Force (SETAF) in Italy, also part of USAREUR, but US forces operating in the two new NATO countries will now be designated as Joint Task Force – East (JTF-E). Unlike SETAF, with a permanently based airborne brigade, an aviation task force and other units, complete with families and an 10/11/06 1:45:07 pm jdw.janes.com • JDW • 22 November 2006 • 3 BRIEFING JOINT TASK FORCE – EAST: VISIBLE US DEFENCE TRANSFORMATION IN EUROPE A team comprised of Romanian, Bulgarian and 1st Battalion, 94th Field Artillery Regiment, 1st Armored Division Soldiers pull security while their teammates raid a nearby building in a combined training exercise at Novo Selo training area, Bulgaria Tanya Polk; ??????? extensive support infrastructure, JTF-E will have only about 100 military people stationed permanently in each country, serving one-year unaccompanied tours while supporting rotational deployed forces averaging around 3,000 in total at any one time. Occasionally these will peak at up to 5,000, all serving tours of up to six months duration. Military personnel will be augmented by a number of contractors from companies yet to be selected. USAREUR is moving forward cautiously with JTF-E implementation, working through a series of incremental stages over the next two years that will slowly bring the new force into being. BRF_JDW_22.11.indd 3 An initial proof-of-concept troop deployment to Romania and the establishment of a provisional headquarters there is scheduled for 2007. Reliable allies Bulgaria and Romania have emerged as strong US allies since 2001. Both joined NATO in 2004 and will enter the EU together in January 2007. Both countries provide substantial forces to multiple international operations, including the former Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq. Romania has some 700 troops each in Afghanistan and Iraq, including a recently reinforced infantry battalion task force conducting combat operations under Canadian command in southern Afghanistan. Under parliamentary pressure in late 2005, Bulgaria withdrew 380 troops from Iraq that had served in Multinational Division South-Centre under Polish command since 2003. US forces already conduct regular combined exercises in the region. During Exercise Immediate Response 2006 in July, Bulgarian and Romanian troops and aircraft trained together at the Novo Selo Training Area in Bulgaria with 800 US Army soldiers from the 1st Armored Division, supported by Blackhawk helicopters and US Air Force F-15E Strike Eagles from the 492nd Fighter Squadron. 10/11/06 1:45:11 pm 4 • 22 November 2006 • JDW • jdw.janes.com BRIEFING Shifting east The US move eastwards is a long-stated defence policy objective, directly linked with the continuing drawdown of US military forces in Central Europe and the dynamic transformation of the US Army into a lighter, more expeditionary force. By 2008 there will onlyy be one US Army Brigade Combat Team (BCT) left in Germany, the Stryker-equipped 2nd Cavalry Regiment at Grafenwöhr, with the enhanced 173rd Airborne Brigade in Vicenza, Italy as the only other army combat formation permanently based in Europe. As a result, a brigade-sized task force in Eastern Europe, drawn from forces based in the US, will account for roughly a third of the army combat power available to EUCOM. Similarly, the US Air Forces in Europe (USAFE) have reduced main bases from 25 to five since 1990 and aircraft numbers from 700 to 200. The constellation of bases and training areas at the heart of JTF-E will provide nearly unlimited training opportunities compared to the restrictions now faced in Germany or Italy, particularly regarding live fire and tactical flying BRF_JDW_22.11.indd 4 at night and on weekends, with vast manoeuvre areas and numerous ranges able to handle all categories of weapons, including field artillery and rocket systems, attack helicopters, tactical jets and AC-130 gunships. Perhaps just as significantly, the new land, sea and air bases along the Black Sea will provide much improved contingency access for deployments into Central Asia, parts of the Middle East and Southwest Asia. They will also serve as storage sites for pre-positioned equipment (PPE), including armoured vehicles, rations, fuel and munitions, although the exact quantities and types of PPE beyond immediate training needs are yet to be determined. Likewise, a JTF-E commander has not yet been identified, but a provisional headquarters is set to stand up in 2007 that will control US military operations in both countries from the 10/11/06 1:45:14 pm jdw.janes.com • JDW • 22 November 2006 • 5 Far left: A soldier from 1st Battalion, 94th Field Artillery explains the workings of an M249 to his Bulgarian counterpart during ‘Immediate Response ’06’; a trilateral training exercise involving more than 600 US, Bulgarian and Romanian soldiers Tanya Polk; ??????? Left: Combined forces from the Bulgarian Army, Romanian 26th Infantry Regiment and the 1st Battalion, 94th Field Artillery Regiment touch down at the Novo Selo training area after successfully completing an air assault mission in Romania Tanya Polk; ??????? Mihael Kogalniceanu Air Base near Constanta, Romania. The Mihael Kogalniceanu complex will also serve as the primary garrison location and airlift hub in Romania, and as a forward operating location (FOL) for fighter aircraft, airlift and tactical helicopters. Other Romanian locations in the Dobrogea region, close to the Black Sea some 250 miles (402 km) east of Bucharest, include the Babadag firing range, manoeuvre training area and rail head, the Cincu training range, port facilities in Constanta, and the smaller Fetesti Air Base. The US previously spent several million dollars upgrading the A Romanian soldier takes the lead and opens an imaginary door as troops from the US and Bulgarian armies practice ‘stacking’ during the first day of training for military operations in urban terrain Tanya Polk; ??????? BRF_JDW_22.11.indd 5 security, operations and logistics infrastructure at Mihael Kogaliceanu when it served as an airlift transit point for deployments to Afghanistan and Iraq in 20022003 and as the Special Operations support base for the initial-entry operation into northern Iraq in the first quarter of 2003. The first US forces to rotate into Romania for training in late 2007 will be a battalion task force of about 900 soldiers built around a squadron of the 2nd Cavalry Regiment (Stryker), which is relocating this year from Fort Lewis, Washington to Grafenwöhr, Germany. A second squadron from the regiment would follow, with each initial rotation expected to last about four months. These events will allow the unit topracticeadefinedsetoftasksona reduced scale so that both USAREUR and the host nations can validate the concept of operations and determine what adjustments may be required for future deployments. The first regular rotations of US-based BCTs are expected to begin in 2008. USAREUR will rely on the army s Global Force Management Process (GFMP) to source units from outside Europe to satisfy EUCOM JTF-E requirements. Most construction and infrastructure improvements taking place in late 2006 and into the first quarter of 2007 will occur on the Romanian army base next to Mihael Kogalniceanu that will host the 2nd Cavalry Regiment and is the garrison for a Romanian mechanised brigade. In Bulgaria, US forces will eventually take advantage of four locations. Graf Ignatievo airbase, near Plovdiv in central Bulgaria, will be the main air hub, garrison and logistics base, supplemented by a storage facility near the port of Burgas. The Novo Selo Training Area and Bezmer airbase, both in south-eastern Bulgaria (central Bulgaria??) will be primary training locations. Both airbases were substantially upgraded recently with the support from the USAF Air Mobility Command as part of “Bulgarian initiatives for establishing NATO interoperability”, according to the US Embassy in Sofia, which added: “The US expectstopayforanyinfrastructure improvements and services necessary for US activities. Major improvements and investments in the joint military facilities will contribute to the modernisation of the Bulgarian military.” The bases will be operated jointly by US and Bulgarian forces but will remain Bulgarian military facilities. Once JTF-E is fully operational, Bulgaria will host approximately 1,500 troops forming a combinedarms battalion task force, along with tactical air, airlift and army aviation assets as required or available. Multiple benefits According to the Romanian foreign ministry, the US access agreement is “an important step in the consolidation of the strategic partnership between Romania and the US” and demonstrates “reciprocal confidence and solidarity”. For the Bulgarian and Romanian armed forces, the presence of US troops equipped with modern weapons and C4ISR systems, and employing the latest US doctrine, is an excellent opportunity to hone advanced coalition warfare skills alongside US and other NATO troops. France and the UK already have bilateral training agreements with Romania, including shared use of training areas and participation in training exercises. Under the terms of separate agreements signed with Bulgaria in 2000, French and Italian troops use the extensive Novo Selo training centre and the Koren training ranges for live-fire exercises. In addition to the majority US Army composition of JTF-E, US Air Force assets and US Special Operations Forces will regularly deploy and gain operational training value, and US Marine forces afloat in-theatre will probably choose to take advantage of the facilities and training opportunities in Bulgaria and Romania. In addition, the posture and the active pace of JTF-E in the region will promote and enhance combined training and exercise initiatives already underway between Bulgaria and Romania, and with neighbouring countries such as Turkey. Jim Dorschner is a JDW Correspondent reporting from Bucharest 10/11/06 1:45:22 pm