Title: Air Assault Operations CPT Jaron Wharton
1Air Assault OperationsCPT Jaron Wharton
2Purpose
- The purpose of this brief is to
teach/re-familiarize leaders with Air Assault
planning TTPs and fundamentals. - BNs are the lowest level that can resource an
AASLT, but the contemporary operating environment
may require a squad to conduct an operation as
part of a QRF, TCP establishment, etc.
3References
- FM 90-4, AASLT Operations
- Gold Book, 101st ABN Division (AASLT)
- 101st Airborne (AASLT) Leaders Training Program
4Agenda
- Definitions
- Five Stages of an Air Assault
- Ground Tactical Plan
- Landing Plan
- Air Movement Plan
- Loading Plan
- Staging Plan
- Summary
- Questions
5Air Assault Tenets
- Integration of assault forces and helicopter
assets - Maneuver under the control of the ground or air
commander - Engage and destroy enemy forces
- To seize and hold key terrain
- Deliberate, precisely planned, vigorously
executed - Allow friendly forces to strike over extended
distances - Attack the enemy when and where he is most
vulnerable
6Air Movement Tenets
- Operations other than AASLTS many of the same
facets, but not an ASLT - Move troops and equipment
- Emplace artillery pieces and ADA systems
- Transport ammo, fuel, and supplies
- Large scale operations still require detailed
planning - Aviation is not task-organized but are released
to return to their parent units upon mission
completion
7Definitions
- AATFC AASLT TF commander (guy overall in charge
of the operation) - AMC air mission commander, usually an aviation
commander (ATK or LIFT Battalion CDR) - GTC ground tactical commander (guy on the
ground) - AMCM air mission coordination meeting, initial
AASLT COA - AMB air mission brief, OPORD for AASLT, PZ to
LZ - FARP forward rearming and refueling point,
aircraft CSS location - DART downed aircraft recovery team
- SEAD suppression of enemy air defense
- Tadpole Diagram describes lift compositions
- ALNO aviation officer, aviation officer at BDE
to plan
8Lift/Serial/Load
9Five Stages of an AASLT
- Ground Tactical Plan (GTP) Drives the AASLT
all other considerations are subordinate to
placing forces where they need to be to fight the
way they need to fight. - Landing Plan
- Air Movement Plan
- Loading Plan
- Staging Plan
-
10AIR ASSAULT PLANNING METHODOLOGY
STAGING PLAN
LOADING PLAN
AIR MOVEMENT PLAN
LANDING PLAN
GROUND TACTICAL PLAN
PLANNING
LP1
PZ
LZ
CAA
LP2
ASSY AREA
LP3
PZ
CAA
LZ
LP4
EXECUTION
RECON SECURITY GUIDES C2 SEQUENCE
PZ SELECTION PZ CONTROL PZ C2 MVMT TABLE BUMP
PLAN SEQUENCING PZ POSTURE
FLIGHT PLANNING IAW LNO AMC ROUTES, AXIS
SP/RP LOCATIONS C2 CONTROL MEASURES MVMT TABLE
SEAD TIMINGS REFUEL/REARM FLIGHT MODES
LZ CONSIDERATIONS SINGLE MULTIPLE
SELECTION SECURITY SPTING FIRES ORIENTATION C2
FORMATION CSS RESUPPLY CASEVAC
WHAT HAS CHANGED?
ESTIMATE BACKWARDS PLAN REHEARSALS (W/WO ACF)
11Five Stages of an AASLT
- Five stages/plans tie together in this way
- -GTP drives LZ selection
- -LZ selection drives the landing plan and air
movement plan - -Flight routes and current friendly locations
dictate the loading plan and PZ locations - -Loading plan defines the requirements that
become the staging plan - -Good GTP takes into account the limitations of
LZs, aircraft available, routes, etc. to mass
combat power at the decisive point
12The Ground Tactical Plan
- Foundation of the AASLT and developed by the GTC
IAW doctrine, TTPs, and METT-T. - GTP drives LZ selection (false LZs).
- GTP Components
- Mission objectives
- Primary/alternate LZs
- Task Organization
- D-day/H-hour times
- Forces required/available
- Special equipment required (kick-off bundles)
- Fire Support Plan (including prep fires)
- ATK aviation missions (CAS or CCA)
- Means of identifying LZs
- Landing formations
- Offloading Procedures (right/left door exit,
assemble en route?) - CASEVAC and CSS issues
13The Landing Plan
- Generally one primary LZ and one alternate LZ per
maneuver BN (each serial must be ready to execute
at either) - Forces must land ready to fight
- Organize on the PZ, not the LZ
- Fly and land in the order of march/assault
- Each serial is able to fight as a team/tactical
integrity - Provide inbound guidance to a/c both radio and
visual - Ground forces exit one or both doors (METT-T)
- Vehicles and ground forces clear LZ quickly
- Rehearse off-load during cold load training,
which is mandated. Not all of your soldiers have
been on a UH-60 or CH-47.
14The Landing Plan
- The landing is a critical component of the AASLT
because it is here that forces are most
vulnerable so the conditions must be set. - Two types of landings driven by METT-T
- -Away from the OBJ (MTC)
- -On the OBJ (raid, FLS seizure, cordon)
- There are many considerations for where you
land, usually time/enemy sensitive.
15The Landing Plan
- Condition Setting
- -Higher level activity, usually BDE level
activity - -Purpose Attrition of enemy combat power that
can affect the AASLT force - Targeting Teams use of theater assets and
organic assets that will assist in the arrival of
the AASLT force with risk mitigated (COLTs, AVN
assets, SCOUTs) - Understand that higher tries to make your
landing conditions favorable but it wont always
happen.
16The Landing Plan
- Grid GL 12345678
- Land Heading 0 degrees
- Marking IR Strobe
- Left Door Exit
- AVN Call sign Hardcore 6
- Door Gunner instructions
- Distance/Direction to OBJ
- NFA locations
- Ranking man on a/c or chalk leader should be on
the dog bone and listen for a cherry or ice
call. - Who gets off firstLTC Hal Moores efforts were
motivational but were they necessarily smart?
OBJ
Wharton LZ
N
17Situational Awareness
- Hot LZ procedures battle drills
- Critical from PZ to LZ
- Where are we during flight?
- When will we land?
- Whats waiting for me at the LZ?
- Ground element/chalk leader has responsibility
from PZ to LZ - Required Items to have or know
- Marked air route map
- Compass
- PLUGR or Garmin
- Commo card
- Air Movement table, tadpole diagram, PZ/LZ
sketch - FM radio
- Location of friendly forces in OBJ area
- Where Murphy pops up - the helicopter wont
always drop you in the correct location, GPS
cant track on board, too much metal to verify
helicopters land heading on your compass.
18The Air Movement Plan
- Flight operation from PZ to LZ and return
- Air Mission Commander (AMC) receives all Army
aviation forces and enroute fires to include
initiation of LZ preparatory fires. - One-way flight routes and air corridors are
utilized. - Air Movement Table is the base document for the
plan - A/C locations
- and type of a/c in each serial
- Departure point, route to and from loading area
and, lift-off and landing times
19Flight Route Example
20Air Movement Table Example
21The Loading Plan
- Based on the Air Movement Plan
- Ensures that troops, equipment and supplies are
loaded on the correct aircraft - Aircraft loads are placed in priority to
establish a bump plan - Planning must cover
- Organization and operation of the PZ
- Load positions
- Day and night markings
- Communications
- Loading plan knowledge critical when mixing
internal and external loads or when mixing
aircraft types. - Additionally, the leader must identify who will
fly on which aircraft, i.e. you dont want to
have all of your mortar tubes, MGs, key leaders
on one a/cmust sync with GTP.
22Situational Awareness
- Chalk Leader Responsibilities
-
- -Usually an E-5/E-6
- -Provides copies of manifest (1 x himself, 1SG,
crew chief/pilot, PZ check-in) - -Rehearses cold load training and instructs
personnel on how to correctly load/unload
aircraft (UH-60s, 90 degrees from the
side/CH-47s, 45 degrees from the rear) - -Monitors radio during flight
- -Tracks all aerial checkpoints IOT verify
location upon landing - -Ensures personnel prepared to dismount the
helicopter NLT five minutes out - -Echoes execute command to exit aircraft
23The Loading Plan
Chalk Card 3 x 5 card
- Front
- PZ Name
- LZ Grid w/same datum as used by a/c
- ALT LZ grid
- Lift
- Serial
- Chalk
- OBJ Name
- Back
- Full Name No Bump
- 1. Chalk LDR
- 2.
- 3. 3rd PL
- 4.
- 5.
- 6.
- 7. Breach Kit
- 8.
24Bump Plan
- Ensures critical men and equipment are loaded on
aircraft should mechanical or other problems
limit planned air resources. - Each aircraft in a serial must have a bump
priority and each soldier on a chalk must have
bump priority. - If an aircraft on the PZ can not lift off and key
personnel are on board, they will offload and
reload another aircraft that has priority.
25Staging Plan
- Based on the Loading Plan and prescribes the
arrival time of ground units (troops, equipment
and supplies) at the PZ in the proper order of
movement - Loads must be ready before aircraft arrive at the
PZ - Ground units usually expected in PZ posture 15
minutes before aircraft arrives - Restates PZ organization, defines flight routes
to the PZ and provides instructions for air
link-up. - Staging Plan may also follow the Ground
Tactical Plan as part of a planned withdrawal.
26Sub-unit Responsibilities
- Send chalk leaders to PZ orientation if
applicable - PAX/vehicle must know lift ,serial , chalk ,
LZ - Vehicles rigged by air assault qualified
personnel - Use internal communications on the PZs
- Identify chalk leaders and signalmen early in
planning process
27Summary
- Five Stages to AASLT Ground Tactical Plan,
Landing Plan, Air Movement Plan, Loading Plan,
Staging Plan - Leaders must incorporate time to rehearse loading
and landing aircraft introduce contingencies
into these rehearsals - Quickly move off of LZs and maintain security in
PZ posture at all times - Principles for air movement operations are
similar to air assault operations
28Questions?