Apache Helicopter Crews Sent to Albania Had Readiness, Equipment Problems By Tony Capaccio
(Includes reaction in graph 7-9 from U.S. congressman who plans a Capitol Hill hearing on the readiness issue).
Washington, June 24 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. AH-64 Apache helicopter crews dispatched with great fanfare to Albania in mid- April for attacks on Serb armor and artillery units in Kosovo were under-trained and poorly equipped for their mission, according to a unit commander.
The crews of Task Force Hawk were minimally qualified to use night vision goggles, had shortages of specialized radios necessary for low-level night attacks and lacked effective electronic warfare gear to defeat Serb air defenses, according to Army Brig. Gen. Richard Cody, a unit commander, in a June 16 memo to Army headquarters.
The aviators and helicopters never saw combat in Kosovo in spite of tremendous political and public pressure to do so. Instead, they spent the first three weeks of the deployment intensely training to make up for readiness shortfalls, Cody wrote in a mid-June memo to Army leaders in Washington, including new Chief of Staff Gen. Eric Shinseki. Two choppers crashed during night training exercises, killing two aviators. ''After 16 full-up mission rehearsal exercises, I would put Task Force Hawk pilots and commanders up against anyone, but it was painful and high-risk during the first three weeks in Albania,'' wrote Cody, who is assistant division commander at the 4th Infantry Division, Fort Hood, Texas.
Chronic Problem
The deployment highlighted a chronic problem with aviation training that resulted in a failure to produce fully qualified air warriors, he wrote. ''We are placing them and their unit at risk when we have to ramp up for a real world crisis,'' Cody wrote of inadequately prepared aviators, of which ''Task Force Hawk is not an anomaly.''
Cody's memo has prompted a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee to schedule a hearing within the next two weeks to examine the readiness of Task Force Hawk. ''I find it disturbing,'' said Representative Herb Bateman, a Virginia Republican who chairs the committee's readiness panel, of the Cody memo. ''I will call the general to testify and the Army can send anybody that it wants,'' Bateman said. Cody's memo will be the main focus of the hearing, said Bateman, who for several years has conducted hearings and commissioned reports by the U.S. General Accounting Office on readiness issues.
Previous Army Statements
Bateman said Cody's memo was particularly disturbing in light of statements from Army officials in April that the helicopter crews were the best trained of any aviation unit in the service for the Kosovo mission.
About 65 percent of the crews had less than 500 hours of flying time in the Apache and none was qualified to fly some common night combat missions, wrote Cody.
The memo disclosed no technical problems with the $16 million Boeing Co. Apaches, which are made at its Mesa, Arizona, plant.
Cody's memo was first disclosed by Legis-Slate, a Washington D.C. based online news service. Bloomberg News obtained its own copy of the six-page memo.
The memo is a standard after-action report, said Army spokesman Lt. Col. Lew Boone. ''Gen. Cody answered in a frank, open and honest manner as we expect are general officers to do. We do recognize we need to look at some issues in the aviation community,'' Boone said.
Pentagon spokesman Ken Bacon today declined comment on the Cody memo.
Reality Check
Cody's memo contrasts with a steady stream of contradictory, confusing and optimistic NATO and Pentagon statements in April and May about to the Apache's combat status and when they would be used.
NATO military spokesman German Air Force Col. Conrad Freytag, for example, told reporters on April 26, as the Apaches were arriving in Albania, they would see combat ''very soon.'' NATO and U.S. officials said repeatedly the choppers would be used when alliance Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Wes Clark said they were ready for combat.
No official, however, indicated how far from ready the chopper force was.
Cody speaks with special authority because he planned and executed the Army's successful 1991 Apache strikes against Iraq in the Persian Gulf War.
Survival Equipment
Significantly, the Apache's current aircraft survival equipment, including the San Jose, California-based Litton Industries Inc. Applied Technology APR-39 radar warning receiver, ''is not reliable enough and in some cases not effective,'' Cody wrote.
NATO and U.S. officials said repeatedly in April and May that, although the Apaches might face a formidable array of Serb air defense missile, including heat-seeking shoulder-fired missiles, the helicopters had adequate protection.
Cody's memo outlined serious problems with the Apaches' self-defense capability. ''The pilots have lost confidence in the APR 39, the ALQ-136 radar jammer and are not sure of the ALQ-144 infrared jammer true capabilities,'' Cody wrote. The ALQ-136 is made by the Clifton, New Jersey avionics division of ITT Industries Inc. The AlQ-144 missile countermeasures system is made by Lockheed Martin's Nashua, New Hampshire Sanders unit.
The APR 36 had problems during all the units 16 mission rehearsals, 'resulting in the pilots ignoring the system altogether,'' Cody wrote.
The ALQ-136 wasn't designed to counter the types of SA-6 and SA-3 missile radars the Serbs used, such as the Flat Face, Straight Flush and Flap Wheel radars, Cody wrote. ''The pilots were given no supporting data as to the effectiveness of the jammers to the threat missiles and radars in the area of operations,'' Cody wrote.
Best Trained Unit
Army officials in Washington said the Task Force Hawk crews were the best trained in the service for the mission. ''They just finished training at (Germany), one of the major training centers, in an all-black out, night operations and are probably the best trained Apache unit in the Army right now to go in on this mission,'' Army Col. Mike Hackerson, an Apache expert told reporters during an April 30 briefing.
The Apaches and crew were from squadrons of the 11th Aviation Regiment, Illesheim, Germany.
Two of the 24 Apaches crashed during night training missions within two weeks of Task Force Hawk arriving at Tirana with its full complement of troops and supporting equipment in mid-April
Cody's memo doesn't address the crashes, one of which killed two aviators, but makes clear the unit upon arriving in Albania was unprepared for night combat missions wearing specialized goggles -- a key Apache capability.
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