I
read a book about the history of the (West) German air force in 1950-1970 recently. The corresponding military history book about the
army in 1950-1970 was very interesting. I can summarise this Luftwaffe
1950-1970 history book for you:
Nukes,
nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes,
nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes,
nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, *breathing* nukes, nukes,
nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes,
nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes, nukes.
And then some considerations about organisational issues and such, but seemingly mostly about nukes.
Seriously;
the two main themes of the Luftwaffe in those early years were the
"strike" role (nuking targets especially in Eastern Europe, primarily using
F-104s) and stopping about 95% of all red strike bombers (presumably mostly with Nike
Hercules and HAWK missiles, since even F-104G would rarely intercept in
time) before they destroyed our strike assets on the ground.
Both were utterly stupid, nonsensical ideas for a long list of reasons each */**.
A single hardware argument sufficed as a knockout argument against both roles at once; ballistic missiles reached their targets with a nuclear warhead at all relevant ranges, and were impossible to intercept under wartime conditions. They were furthermore practically impossible to destroy prior to their launch except with strategic surprise, and aircraft on airbases would have suffered from such an attack even more.
The
F-104s, HAWK and Nike Hercules batteries constituted almost the entire
combat power of the Luftwaffe by the late 60's, so almost the entire
Luftwaffe followed an idiotic design.
This
isn't really about hindsight; the basics about ballistic missiles were
understood early on. The mistakes made were utterly ordinary and plausible ones:
A
Luftwaffe dominated by pilots was able to understand the capabilities of
ballistic missiles, but not willing to yield to the conclusions. Second,
they were fascinated by the destructive power of nuclear warheads and simply had
not thought the whole World War Three thing through.***
The
book mentions that the young new pilots weren't too much irritated
when an exercise demanded them to nuke an airfield right next to an East
German town. The more mature senior officers may have expected more
scruple from them, but they themselves failed to have enough scruple and to think
rationally about nuclear warfare at their level. The understanding of
nuclear war appears to have remained patchy instead of being clear and
calling for clear, sweeping consequences.
In
other words: The early FRG Luftwaffe did not serve the people, it was full of
shit. We were really lucky that we got through the Cold War alive with
such dumb Cold Warriors. I don't even blame these officers; I blame those who allowed such men to be in such positions. More mature men with more analytical minds were needed. The ones who ran the early FRG Luftwaffe were former nazi air force generals and former nazi ace fighter pilots; neither did a good job.
The
more history I learn about the Cold War the more I get convinced that
the reason for why the Warsaw Pact never attacked wasn't our deterrence,
but that the pseudocommunists were not all that motivated to conquer
Western Europe to begin with.
S O
defence_and_freedom@gmx.de
.
*: Strike was nonsense: It was all-or-nothing deterrence, and its employment in actual war would have led to the destruction of the German nation. Ballistic missiles were more reliable means. Ballistic missiles were not dependent on long runways. BMs could be dispersed for survivability in times of crisis or war. BMs were single purpose (de facto nuke only), so they didn't suffer from attrition in a conventional role until used for nuclear strike (quite a concern with the Starfighters). Many nuclear strike targets (and most tactical nuclear strike targets) were on German soil, those missions would have been perverse.
**: Radars of the time didn't reliably detect strike bombers below 1,000 ft, so intercept was nonsense. Strike bombers at Mach 2 and at very high altitude were almost impossible to intercept with the required reliability. Surface-to-air area defence missiles (Nike Hercules, HAWK) were considered the mainstay of bomber interception, but they were easily saturated, due to their de facto or complete static setup easily targeted (similar to what happened to Egyptian SA-6 late in the Yom Kippur War), and the missiles were initially useless below 1,000 ft especially in the hilly Southern Germany. Missile stocks would have been expended in less than an hour of intense defence. Starfighters had a radar, but it wasn't very good and indeed useless against low-flying aircraft at night. There were SAM belt gaps in the north at sea. The SAM systems could be defeated by jamming. Nike Hercules wasn't really effective without using a fallout-producing 2 kt or bigger nuke of its own against incoming bombers. HAWK didn't reach up high enough; all combat aircraft were able to overfly its engagement zone.
The nonsense was clearly to hope for an almost impenetrable shield that would protect the strike assets till they take off to their strike missions. All that SAM belt effort was thus meant to partially compensate for the wrong choice of strike platform; BMs would not have needed that kind of protection. The way to go was to think about air superiority; exchange ratios should have been at the centre instead of '% of strike bombers stopped on their first sortie'.
***: They weren't exactly intellectuals and seemed to have overemphasised the protection of Germany from being a conventional battlefield, at the expense of risking it would become an uninhabitable nuclear battlefield.