"Nonkinetic Force" Provides Electronic Support To Troops On The
Ground
EA-6B Prowlers assigned to Electronic Attack Squadron 135 deploy
daily from the Nimitz flight deck, jamming electronic signals in
support of Operation Enduring Freedom. Employing force that doesn't
use explosions or projectiles -- known in military circles as
"nonkinetic force" -- Carrier Air Wing 11 supports troops on the
ground in Afghanistan while minimizing the potential for civilian
casualties.
"Our main focus of effort is to dominate the electromagnetic
spectrum," explained Navy Lt. Cmdr. Blake Tornga, Electronic Attack
Squadron 135 maintenance officer. "That means we preserve it for
coalition forces and we deny its use to Afghan insurgents. If we
can successfully do that many times, the ground commander may not
need a bomb."
Prowler missions directly support the July 2009 tactical
directive issued by Army Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, commander of
U.S. and international forces in Afghanistan. The directive limits
the use of force that could result in civilian casualties. "The
enemy command and control network in Afghanistan is fairly
dispersed and flexible," Tornga said. "We have to constantly adapt
our tactics, based on new technology in the hands of the enemy, to
interdict parts of that network."
When the Navy received its first Prowlers in January 1971 and
deployed them to Vietnam in 1972, their primary mission was focused
on jamming enemy radar. They supported strike aircraft, ships and
ground troops by degrading the enemy's early warning capability and
electronic weapons systems. The EA-6B of yesterday, outfitted with
today's technology, has adapted its platform to support Operation
Enduring Freedom in a way no other airframe can, Tornga said.
"There are very few electronic attack platforms out there," he
noted. "We are the only tactical electronic attack platform.
Mountain valleys, small turns, staying tight with a convoy -- that
mission right now can only be done with the EA-6B."
Prowlers have been performing missions for years that fall in
line with McChrystal's directive, Tornga said. "There will
certainly remain a need for kinetics in support of the ground
forces, but being able to turn a kinetic situation into a
nonkinetic one is pretty rewarding," he said. "Some of the
real-time feedback we get from the ground troops after a successful
mission makes me realize why we need to be here, and it makes this
deployment very, very meaningful."
Since entering the U.S. 5th Fleet area of operations Sept. 18,
Nimitz aircraft have flown more than 2,058 sorties, providing 30
percent of the close-air support to the coalition forces in
Afghanistan.