Counteriar Operations – Air Force Doctrine Document (AFDD) 3-01

Counterair Operations – Air Force Doctrine Document (AFDD) 3-01 by U. S. AIR. FORCE is published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform and was released on November 7, 2012. This 52-page document outlines the mission of the United States Air Force, emphasizing the importance of achieving and maintaining air superiority in various operational domains, including air, space, and cyberspace. It introduces the concept of the air domain and discusses the levels of control that can be exercised, such as parity, superiority, and supremacy, particularly in the context of historical and ongoing military conflicts.
Readers will find a comprehensive examination of how Air Force forces can effectively employ their assets within a joint force to secure control of the air domain. The document details the multifaceted nature of counterair operations, which extend beyond mere defense to include offensive actions against enemy capabilities. It highlights the collaborative efforts required from various military branches and agencies to achieve air superiority, providing guidance on the planning, integration, and execution of counterair strategies. This edition serves as a crucial resource for understanding the operational doctrine necessary for successful military engagements in the air domain.
Official synopsis Publisher
The mission of the United States Air Force is to fly, fight, and win in air, space, and cyberspace. A crucial part of achieving that mission involves obtaining and maintaining superiority in the air domain. That domain, defined for the first time in this publication, is the area, beginning at the Earth’s surface, where the atmosphere has a major effect on the movement, maneuver, and employment of joint forces. Within that domain, forces exercise degrees of control or levels of influence, characterized as parity, superiority, or supremacy. The US has enjoyed at least air superiority in all conflicts since the Korean War. The US will probably retain that superiority in today’s ongoing conflicts, but the prospect of near-peer competitors in the not-too-distant future raise the possibility of air parity – a condition in the air battle in which one force does not have air superiority over others – or even conceding superiority to the adversary if Air Force forces are not properly employed. Our possession of air superiority helps enable joint forces to dominate adversary operations in all domains and to achieve a wide range of cross-domain effects. Unless we can freely maneuver in the air while denying the enemy the ability to do the same, we do not have superiority. Therefore, this publication addresses how the commander of Air Force forces can best employ his assets within a joint force to achieve control in the air domain to enable the overall joint force effort. Counterair is more than just force protection or air and missile defense. It also includes offensive actions against an enemy’s capabilities, allowing us to seize the initiative and force the adversary into a defensive posture. Furthermore, counterair is executed by more than just air assets. Counterair is a joint, multinational, and interagency team effort, comprising a combination of command and control systems, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems, aircraft and missile systems in air-to-air and air-to-ground roles, and surface-to-air defense weapons. The effect of air superiority is not normally an end unto itself. Air superiority provides enormous military advantages, allowing the joint force greater freedom of action to carry out its assigned missions (freedom to attack) while minimizing its vulnerability to enemy detection and attack (freedom from attack). The success of any major air, land, or maritime operation may depend on the degree of air superiority achieved. This Air Force doctrine document provides guidance for designing, planning, integrating, coordinating, executing, and assessing counterair operations. It provides operational doctrine to gain and maintain control of the air. As such, it focuses on how air forces can be organized and employed to successfully conduct counterair operations.
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