The U.S. military had great success in Iraq and
Afghanistan with newly developed GPS-based systems designed to track friendly
forces and avoid fratricide incidents, but before it can widen the use of such
devices it must improve the way it displays their information, according to one
U.S. Air Force officer.
The military is working to reduce the size of
so-called blue force tracking transmitters to make them easier for troops to
carry, said Col. Kent Traylor, vice commander of Air Force Space Command’s Space
Warfare Center. The ones that have seen action so far are about the size of a
hardcover book, and the Air Force is hoping to get them down to the size of a
9-volt battery, he said.
But making such devices available to much larger
numbers of ground troops could cause problems because the military currently is
not equipped to handle the information, Traylor said in an interview Sept.
11.
The Pentagon employed several different blue force
tracking devices in Afghanistan and Iraq. The U.S. Army, for example,
accelerated the fielding of a developmental system called Grenadier Brat for use
in Afghanistan. The Grenadier Brat determines the position of its carrier using
signals from the GPS satellite constellation, and transmits that information to
commanders via communications satellites. About 1,500 of the systems have been
deployed for use aboard vehicles and by foot soldiers thus far during the war on
terrorism.
Another Army system that was rushed to the field
after Sept. 11, 2001, was the Force 21 Battle Command Brigade and Below system,
which in addition to tracking friendly forces uses information from intelligence
satellites and other sources to keep tabs on enemies. About 1,500 such devices
have been deployed thus far, with about 3,000 more to follow in the next six
months.
Yet another blue force tracking device, dubbed the
Movement Tracking System, was “instrumental in preventing a convoy ambush and
[was] used to pinpoint the location for a medical evacuation” in Iraq, Deirdre
Lee, the Pentagon’s director of defense procurement and acquisition policy, said
in written congressional testimony in July. The Movement Tracking System, is
similar to the GPS devices that trucking firms use to keep track of their
fleets.
Though they helped reduce the risk of friendly fire
incidents, the blue force tracking devices used in Afghanistan and Iraq, which
numbered less than 10,000, also added clutter and confusion to the information
displays of some commanders, Traylor said.
“We need to think carefully about how we use blue
force tracking in the future, and be careful that we do not abuse the
technology,” Traylor said during a Sept. 3 panel discussion at the Strategic
Space 2003 conference in Omaha, Neb.
The military and industry must find ways to filter
blue force tracking information so that individuals receive only the specific
data that they need, Traylor said in the interview. While a pilot providing
close air support may need the location of every soldier in a particular area,
for example, a four-star general may need only basic information about the
location of troop clusters, he said.
Further, avoiding accidents like the downing of
British and U.S. aircraft in Iraq by a Patriot anti-missile battery has more to
do with improved training and procedures than wider use of tracking devices,
Traylor said during the Sept. 3 panel discussion.
Retired Air Force Gen. Howell Estes, a former
commander of U.S. Space Command, said it might be difficult for some commanders
to make much sense of large numbers of individual troops appearing as blips on a
two-dimensional display screen.
“There is no question that blue force tracking did a
magnificent job in Operation Iraqi Freedom,” Estes said. “But you need to look
at what the commander needs to know, and what he maybe does not need to
know.”
Estes also noted that wider use of blue force
tracking devices means that sooner or later some are likely to fall into the
wrong hands, potentially allowing enemies to appear to U.S. and allied
commanders as friendly forces. He said this danger could be mitigated by
requiring troops to punch in access codes periodically for continued
transmissions.
Blue force tracking devices will become more critical
as the U.S.-led war on terrorism expands and forces increasingly find themselves
fighting in areas where the battle lines are blurred, said retired Army Col.
Kenneth Allard, a military analyst here.
In the wake of their success in Afghanistan and Iraq,
blue force tracking devices have become highly coveted among ground troops, one
Army source said. “Would you want your son or daughter to be one of the troops
without it?” the source said.