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U.S. ARMY INCREASES SHADOW PLATOONS

June 6, 2012 by

U.S. ARMY INCREASES SHADOW PLATOONS
By James Ryan and Sofia Bledsoe, ASA(ALT)

30 May 12. When the Afghan theater commander called on the Army to increase the number of Shadow platoons in theater during the height of the 2011 Operation Enduring Freedom summer campaign, the Army was ready to answer the call.

Gen. David Petraeus, who was the Afghan theater commander at the time, saw the need to put more “eyes in the sky” as critical to the success of the campaign.

There was only one problem.

The very thing that made the RQ-7B Shadow unmanned aircraft system so attractive was also a limitation.

Shadow platoons are an organic support to their parent brigade combat team and Special Forces groups. That means that to deploy a platoon separate from its parent BCT would strip that brigade of its UAS platoon during its next deployment. With a Boots on the Ground/Dwell ratio, which is the time deployed vs. time home at nearly 1:1, it meant there were no uncommitted forces in the active Army component.

“Even the Army National Guard, that were also heavily committed at the time, could not support the request,” said Todd Smith, deputy product manager for Ground Maneuver Unmanned Aircraft Systems, or UAS. Their issue was compounded by an even longer dwell requirement that would remove the unit from the rotation for four years after commitment.

The team, which consisted of the Army Staff, the UAS Project Office, National Guard Bureau, and AAI, began working feverishly to find a solution to provide immediate support to the Soldiers in theater.

The Shadow is the Army’s medium-sized UAS that, while not as capable as larger platforms such as the MQ-1C Gray Eagle or the MQ-9 Reaper, has built a solid reputation as a dependable workhorse, surpassing all other Army UAS in flight hours with more than 700,000 logged and has been very successful at meeting the brigade and below missions. The Shadow system is designed for a crew of 22 and provides 12 hours of reconnaissance in a 24-hour period.

Timing was critical to the success of the Afghan summer campaign.

All the U.S. military services were called by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to find a solution to close this capability gap. While several ideas for incremental improvements were suggested, none were sufficient in scope, according to Smith.

But after much debate, the Army proposed a bold shift in how Shadow platoons would be employed and focused on increasing their operational tempo instead of just adding more units.

“Simply put, the Army suggested adding an additional Ground Control Station, two aircraft and nine contract personnel to each brigade’s Shadow platoon with the intent of facilitating a second mission string per day,” Smith said. The contractors would take over the launch and recovery duties of the platoon freeing the Soldiers to concentrate on flying the actual missions.

“The result effectively doubles platoons’ potential operations tempo, or OPTEMPO, while requiring the addition of less than half the personnel and equipment of another platoon,” Smith said.

The Army had previously experimented with a similar concept when it deployed in 2010 with the 101st Airborne Division, according to Smith. “We called it the ‘Super Platoon’ which was a 35-Soldier concept that originated early in the program to meet increased operational and maintenance requirements.”

The concept added one additional GCS and a handful of contract operators to expand the Shadow coverage within a BCT’s area of responsibility. While this initiative was not originally intended to increase OPTEMPO, it did show the viability of the idea and did not break the Army’s redline resourcing requirements. More importantly, it proved very cost effective.

The secretary, seeing that this initiative exceeded the original support request, approved the Army’s plan with one change.

In the Army’s original plan, the standing up of nine sites would be a phased approach ov

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