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The Future of NATO Airpower

Book

The Future of NATO Airpower

DOI link for The Future of NATO Airpower

The Future of NATO Airpower book

How are Future Capability Plans Within the Alliance Diverging and How can Interoperability be Maintained?

The Future of NATO Airpower

DOI link for The Future of NATO Airpower

The Future of NATO Airpower book

How are Future Capability Plans Within the Alliance Diverging and How can Interoperability be Maintained?
ByJustin Bronk
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2019
eBook Published 31 May 2020
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003100201
Pages 152
eBook ISBN 9781003100201
Subjects Politics & International Relations
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Bronk, J. (2019). The Future of NATO Airpower: How are Future Capability Plans Within the Alliance Diverging and How can Interoperability be Maintained? (1st ed.). Whitehall Papers. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003100201

ABSTRACT

Airpower remains the cornerstone of NATO’s military advantage, so maintaining the ability to win air superiority over peer opponents in a conflict is key to long-term deterrence stability in both Europe and the Pacific. This Whitehall Paper examines the various modernisation and future capability development efforts being undertaken within NATO, and analyses the major threat systems and overall modernisation trends of the West’s main peer-competitors – Russia and China.

US airpower capability development efforts are increasingly focused on countering the growing challenge from the Chinese military in the Pacific. To meet this challenge, the Pentagon is planning to transform the way it operates across all domains over the next 15 years. New platforms, weapons systems and increasing automation of command and control threaten to leave NATO allies behind.

Current acquisition and modernisation plans of European air forces may eventually close the capability gap with current US theatre entry standard capabilities, but by then the US will have leapt ahead once more. Furthermore, many of the airpower capabilities which the US is pursuing for the Pacific theatre are significantly less relevant for the demands of deterrence against Russia in Europe. Given continuing dependence on US enablers on the part of other NATO members, a significant divergence in capability plans threatens to undermine crucial Alliance interoperability if not recognised and managed early.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter I|13 pages

The Context: Home-Grown Problems and Adversary Innovations

chapter II|21 pages

The Big Player the United States

chapter III|17 pages

The Medium Powers: Europe’s Leading Air Forces

chapter IV|10 pages

The Smaller NATO Air Forces: In Search of Aviable Niche

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion: Challenges and Opportunities

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