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ARTICLES
Index
1.
UAV Evolution: A Total Product
Perspective
2. The
New Isolationism
3. Can
Europe Consolidate?: Industry Must Focus on Winnable Markets
UAV Evolution:
A Total Product Perspective
Unmanned (or Uninhabited
for the politically correct) Air Vehicles are all the rage; every
military wants them, every defense company wants to build them.
Not that UAV's are new; far from it, UAV's have been conceived,
built, and used, with limited publicized success, for as long
as manned aircraft. In World War I, an inventor named Charles
F. Kettering developed an "aerial torpedo", little more
than a subscale biplane loaded with explosives. In the century
that followed we saw target drones like the Firebee, reconnaissance
drones like the still mysterious D-21, and even remotely piloted
conventional fighters used in peace and war. The US Air Force
used both D-21's and remotely piloted fighters during the Viet
Nam conflict. Recent UAV interest, however, is more universal
and more intense than ever before, fueled by the high profile
role they played in the war in Afghanistan, the building emphasis
on information warfare, and the ever increasing reluctance of
Western governments to put people at risk.
UAV users and producers are struggling to
anticipate the eventual form the UAV will take in order to achieve
it first. At a 2002 Shepard Group UAV conference in London, and
immediately afterward at Farnborough, a casual observer could
see that despite the long history of UAV usage the future evolution
of the type is in dispute. Compare the stealthy, swift, turbine
driven, complex, expensive UCAV's under development for DARPA
and the USAF by Northrop Grumman and Boeing with the sometimes
Rotax powered products of other companies. To complicate matters,
there are still respected, if unpopular, voices asking why companies
and governments should spend the money to develop completely new
airframes and systems when there is a large population of surplus
serviceable aircraft which might be adapted to autonomous or remote
control far more cheaply.
How can users and builders of the UAV thoughtfully
and effectively anticipate its evolution in order to achieve its
potential? Experience suggests that any successful approach will
incorporate two elements:
- A total product
approach
- Evolution driven by the men and women on the ground
Despite the confusion of conflicting constituencies
and visions, the UAV will evolve along some paths and not along
others, and the users and builders that reap the most benefit
from the UAV will be those that figure out those correct paths
first. Easier said than done, of course, however UAV's are not
the first example of product and mission innovation; the automobile,
the aircraft, and the personal computer are three that come quickly
to mind. Those previous examples of innovation may shed some light
on the future of the UAV.
Each of these three is a derivative but
distinct innovation, meaning that they were enabled by precedent
core technologies but represent utterly new products and applications.
The internal combustion engine is the single most important core
technology behind the automobile and the aircraft; the microprocessor
was the core technology behind the personal computer. The internal
combustion engine, used in factories for instance, and the automobile
and aircraft represent completely distinct products, as the personal
computer is distinct from the microprocessor. Likewise, the UAV
is derivative, yet distinct.
These three products share another link
to UAV's: war played a tremendous role in their development
and dissemination. Even before French taxi drivers shuttled troops
to the front in World War I, the automobile and its close derivatives
became intertwined with warfare. Many people learned to drive
as soldiers; my father's first driving lesson was in an Army Air
Corps jeep in 1943. Microprocessor and computer development was
marked early on by the efforts of cryptographers and ballisticians
in World War II. The accelerated evolution of the aircraft cannot
be separated from the requirements of hot and cold wars.
When the automobile first appeared in the
late 1800's, it was expensive, unreliable, and impractical. For
years it remained a luxury item, a toy, rather than a broadly
useful tool. It was alien to the existing transportation and support
systems; the roads were meant for horses and wagons, and the other
horse-drawn and pedestrian traffic didn't integrate well with
automobiles: horses and people have innate common sense (have
you ever seen a horse run into a tree or off the road?) Horses
and people move more slowly than even early automobiles, and in
some states automobiles were required to be preceded by a man
on foot, carrying a lantern to warn the incumbent transport. Finding
fuel was problematic; petroleum was primarily processed into kerosene
for lighting purposes at first, and gasoline required both a high
level of demand and a distribution system, both of which required
time to develop. Early cars were unreliable, but there were no
repair shops, just as there were no gas stations.
In fact, the automobile was not a complete
total product, and until it became complete, it could never achieve
its potential. The total automobile product included physical
elements, such as a fuel production system, gas stations, repair
shops, better roads, and car dealerships. It also included nonphysical
elements, like traffic rules and a way to integrate with the existing
transportation systems (or replace them), and altered mental models
on the parts of pedestrians and drivers, who could no longer rely
on horse-sense to keep them safe.
The same is true for the personal computer
and the aircraft. While early aircraft needed only open grass
fields, the complete product today includes hard runways and taxi-ways,
instrument landing systems, a system of airways and navigation
aids, pilot training centers, air traffic control systems, etc.,
etc. Computers without displays and keyboards were completely
useless, but even with them they had limited utility. It turns
out that the complete product for the personal computer includes
printers, scanners, productivity and entertainment applications,
and networks.
UAV's will need to become complete products
before they can achieve their potential as well, and the nature
of those apparently peripheral but actually integral elements
will shape their evolution. Without a road network, automobile
distribution would likely have been limited and its evolution
would have certainly been affected. The sports car as we know
it would not exist, and cross-country ability would have been
emphasized over speed and comfort. Without e-mail or the Internet,
personal computers would be absent from many more homes, and their
configurations would emphasize less connectivity. Without navigation
aids and hard runways flying would be a fair weather activity
at slow speeds, and surface travel would be highly competitive
even over long distances.
The elements that surround the UAV product
are not peripheral to its evolution and success, but integral.
To realize its potential the users and builders of UAV's will
have to model and then support the development of the other elements
that make UAV's a complete product, and in doing so they will
be better able to anticipate its evolution. They will match the
need with the solution at the right time, neither too early nor
too late, and they will win.
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There are several trends within the
examples we've used that may reappear within the UAV space.
The first regards volume and price. The popular success
of the personal computer and the automobile have both come
about through a dramatic drop in real unit price and a simultaneous
increase in value. For aircraft, while unit prices per aircraft
in real terms have not fallen, unit costs for effect have.
Today passengers fly more cheaply than ever before in real
terms, and a B-2 bomber, while costly on a unit basis, is
more effective for less risk than a B-17. All indications
are that UAV development will be driven not only by mission
cost effectiveness but by unit cost as well. While UAV's
may be considered expendable, however, there is little need
to fly them for training, as manned aircraft are flown.
The normal attrition and operating wear and tear associated
with manned aircraft operations will be absent, so that
not only unit cost but volume trends will decline. Even
if manned aircraft never completely disappear, it appears
inevitable that a significant portion of requirements met
by manned aircraft will one day be met by UAV's, just
as satellite reconnaissance replaced manned over flight
and some human intelligence. How does a multi-billion dollar
defense company transition to a product that is lower cost
and lower volume than that it replaces? And, in spite of
the erosion of demand in some requirements areas, what degree
of growth can be expected as UAV's open up new operational
potential and requirements?
The second trend is network reliance.
In all three examples, networks were the key elements in
completing the product. Network creation mattered, and so
did network integration, both rules based and mental. Automobiles
depended on road and fuel distribution networks, and on
the development of traffic rules and new human behaviors
and understandings to operate. Personal computers rely on
the Internet, WAN's and LAN's, and relevant protocols. The
ATC system, route system, and pilot training and certification
systems all are essential to the utility of the aircraft
as we know it. The UAV is already recognized as another
node in the system of systems, however the rules and infrastructure
remain to be determined. Electromagnetic bandwidth issues
remain to be resolved. The data pipes are too narrow today,
and because of general bandwidth demand, frequency usage
can cause conflicts between UAV users and others. Perhaps
laser and satellite based communications solutions are one
answer. Airspace suffers from similar capacity constraints:
UAV flight paths in both commercial and military use airspace,
including over a battlefield, must be coordinated laboriously
ahead of time today. The limits this places on the utility
of the UAV will not be acceptable to battlefield commanders,
and real time air traffic rules must be developed that allow
much closer interplay between UAV's and other assets.
Human behaviors also need adjustment; commanders with much
greater information available will have to learn to focus
and exclude in order to lead effectively. Not only will
they need to rapidly extract the important information from
a sea of data, but also they will have to learn to look
away from their junior leaders so that they can do their
jobs. If a battalion commander sees everything each platoon
leader sees, he will frequently see them making decisions
he would not make. If he intervenes, he is doing their job,
and in the process undermining their ability act and decide
independently. Who, meanwhile, is doing the battalion commander's
job?
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UAV
total product components may include:
Launch and recovery systems and options:
- Automatic landing systems and flight rules allowing
operation in manned aircraft systems, e.g., airports,
aircraft carriers
- Distinct systems, e.g., aerial launch/recovery,
parachute recovery
Storage/operations
platforms:
- A UAV/UCAV carrier, vs. an aircraft carrier, with
vertical launch capability, sea, net or airborne recovery,
or a dedicated UAV/UCAV deck
- Submarine, aerial, or land storage, launch &
recovery systems more akin to missile launch than
current systems
- Field recovery systems, like CSAR or tracked vehicle
recovery systems for finding and salvaging downed
and damaged UAV's
Communications:
- Laser or other high capacity comms options that
don't conflict with other users
- Satellite comms to overcome line of sight limitations
- Autonomous operation and intelligence processing
to decrease communications traffic flow
Behavioral/Social/Traffic
Network:
- Leadership training and integration of UAV capabilities
- Integration/conflict resolution with the pilot community;
officer vs. enlisted mission control/pilot responsibilities
- Airspace sharing and flight rules
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Evolutionary
pathways not widely discussed already:
Military:
- Persistent high altitude airborne air defense -
missile platform, sensor platform
- Communications relay/super low orbit comms satellite
- Persistent meteorological sensor for ballistic/indirect
fires
- Manned fighter decoy to draw missile fire, for deception
operations
- Secure communications medium for SOF; robot carrier
pigeon
- Light/Medium transport for high risk insertions/extractions
Civil:
- Light aircraft personal transport; own or rent a
plane and use it without ever going through the expense
and effort of learning to fly
- IFR capability without IFR training
- Agricultural/mineral monitoring, exploration, and
development
- Search and rescue
- Environmental monitoring, counting elk, etc.
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The third and most important trend is the
development and evolution of the product at the level of the user.
Studying the complete product will provide part of the evolutionary
picture for users and builders of UAV's; the rest of the story
will be written on the ground. The story goes that the first air-to-air
combat consisted of pilots throwing bricks and firing pistols.
A Frenchman confounded the Germans by mounting a machine gun directly
in front of him and firing through the propeller, raking up impressive
victories - until the crude armor he used to protect his propeller
from his own bullets gave way and he shot himself down. The Germans,
upon examining the wreckage, decided to go with a less suicidal
solution, and developed a way to synchronize the gun and propeller.
Jimmy Doolittle proved the first ILS and Billy Mitchell demonstrated
the ability of an aircraft to sink a ship. Likewise, users were
often the first to see possibility in automobiles and personal
computers; e-mail was not the fruit of a strategic development
effort, nor were racecars or ambulances, yet the value of each
of those is undisputed. Today the automobile has evolved into
trucks that carry freight, fire and rescue vehicles, minivans
and SUV's. The personal computer that we use for socializing,
banking, buying books and doing research is a long way, in application
and capability, from the overpriced scientific calculator of the
'70's. And the aircraft that Patty Wagstaff thrills us in, the
777 we fly to Europe, the CL-415 water bomber, an RC-135 and the
FA-22 are beyond the imagination of the earliest aviation pioneers.
The UAV will go through its own evolution.
It will be driven by the development of a complete product and
the needs and actions of ground level users who will adapt it
as they can to the requirements they live each day. There is no
leader and follower in that evolution; as users address needs
they reveal more of the complete product, and as the product becomes
more complete its potential becomes more apparent to users. Some
users will not experience the crucible of combat, and will not
develop new requirements and solutions. Some governments and militaries
will not listen to their experienced users, nor will they invest
in developing the complete product. Some companies will neither
seek out nor listen to users, nor work to develop or encourage
the development of the complete product. Others will, and those
others will realize the potential of the UAV.
The New Isolationism
Featured in
Defense News (February 2003) and entitled: "European Powers
Slip Toward Isolationism"
George Washington warned us to avoid "foreign
entanglements", kicking off the isolationist streak in this
country, even though those entanglements assisted our own freedom.
The United States today has indeed become entangled, more so than
ever imagined by Presidents Washington or Monroe, in spite of
a "two steps forward, one step backward" progress towards
world engagement. That entanglement has been costly, and rewarding.
Few of us today can imagine siding with the peace protesters who
argued against war with Nazi Germany and Imperialist Japan, or
resisting the investments in peace and freedom in NATO and South
Korea. Not all investments worked out; Viet Nam didn't, to the
lasting sorrow of the Vietnamese, and Haiti seems to be sliding
back into hell. But other ones did, in Bosnia and Kosovo.
After 227 years, however, there is a new
isolationism, and it is no longer US based. No serious US politician
has suggested withdrawing troops from Europe for years. The new
isolationism inhabits the oddest possible location: the European
countries that benefited most from US participation in the world,
France and Germany.
Ever since De Gaulle, there has been a
point of view in Europe, strongest in France and Germany, that
the real contest was not between the US/Europe and. Communism,
but Europe and the US. It holds that these two entities (generously
defining Europe as an entity) would eventually represent two poles
of power inevitably drawn into conflict. Setting aside the questionable
logic of this argument, which is challenged at the very least
by the eventual emergence of India and China as independent centers
of economic and military power, it has served to justify a policy
of limiting and diminishing US power and freedom of maneuver in
the world.
Exercise of US power is both limiting and
humiliating to France and Germany. Remember the Suez adventure,
and the quick stop the US put to it, and the more recent US interventions
in Kosovo and Bosnia. German miscalculation contributed to the
dismemberment of Yugoslavia, and a general lack of will and leadership
permeated Europe while innocents died. Nothing irks like a neighbor
stepping in to clean and mow one's own backyard.
For Europe to equal the US on the world
stage requires a step change increase in its ability and will
to exercise power, or a step change decrease in that of the US.
There lies the motivation for the new isolationism, because Europe
is not now nor is it likely in the near future to make the investments
in treasure and blood to match the US investment in the world.
It simply lacks the will to do so.
Therefore, its only option is to isolate
the US on the path to creating the step change reduction in American
will and capability.
George Washington was right about the risks
of foreign entanglements. The European dependence on NATO has
left them wealthy, comfortable, relatively safe, and weak in capability
and will. Our entanglements in the UN and NATO have left us seeking
the approval and support of countries with which we have virtually
nothing in common. Countries like Libya chair UN Human Rights
commissions, and Iraq is about to chair a UN Disarmament Commission.
The US seeking UN approval to act is a bit like a warden asking
prisoners to vote on whether the guards should be issued billy
clubs and shotguns during a riot.
Europe is about to accomplish peacefully
the unifying dreams of Napoleon and Hitler. France and Germany
are not coincidentally the home countries of these villains, at
least in the eyes of their brother Europeans. It is as clear to
the Portuguese as it is to the French that France retains unique
and independent interests, and most of Europe trusts the French
little and the Germans less when it comes to setting aside narrow
national ambitions and making decisions in the best interests
of all. The budget and fiscal constraints all members agreed to
represent one case in point, and the disarmament of Iraq is another.
France and Germany will bust the budget
deficit caps they agreed to; the French argue the caps are now
unreasonable. What the Greeks and Spaniards are asking themselves
is, would the French think those caps were unreasonable if Greeks
or Spaniards were the ones breaking them? If the members' rules
apply to no one, or worse, to everyone but the French and Germans,
the EU will undergo tremendous strain. If the French do not either
abide by the cap or pay the penalty, it will be clear to all of
Europe that France will always put its narrow interests ahead
of those of Europe, and no one is strong enough to make them do
otherwise. Many do not need confirmation for what they already
knew.
With Iraq, the French and Germans may have
gone too far, and the strains they have added to the already stretched
fabric of the European Union may tear it. Many of us assumed the
French and German resistance to the war followed old patterns:
in particular the French would negotiate for postwar oil and other
rights. True to form they would hold out for the best deal, then
join in the attack at the last minute, a la 1991.
But this time the resistance went beyond
negotiation to a fundamental undermining of the US position and
the public sandbagging of US Secretary of State Colin Powell at
the UN. Ironically, the apparent weakness of UN resolve will only
encourage Hussein and increase the odds of war. For that reason,
this administration may not welcome them back now, even if they
come around. But the rest of Europe's leaders have watched this,
apparently with horror. None of the smaller European countries
want a Europe dominated by France and Germany, less still do they
want to enter into an oppositional relationship with the US. They,
in fact, like the presence of US troops in Europe, not because
of the threat from outside Europe, but because of the threats
from within it. And they recognize that while an Iraq armed with
and distributing weapons of mass destruction may not directly
threaten France and Germany, it makes for a much more dangerous
world for everyone indirectly. Nor do they want to go to war in
Iraq unnecessarily, as the French and German actions may compel
them too. These countries' leaders, now including the UK, Norway,
Spain, Italy, Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Portugal,
have broken publicly with France and Germany. The prospect of
a common EU foreign policy looks slim indeed.
The new isolationism is aimed at the US,
however it has made very limited real, if highly publicized, headway.
Its greatest proponents lead the governments of France and Germany,
and demonstrate in the streets of those and many other countries.
But the US appears about to act in Iraq, and once it has done
so, and Iraqis begin to describe their sufferings under Saddam
Hussein, it will be difficult to fault the action. Once the laboratories
and storage facilities for WMD are opened, it will be even harder
to refute what Richard Butler, George Bush, and the rest of us
know about Iraq's WMD, which, by the way is what Chirac and Schroeder
know as well.
When that happens, the new new isolationism
will occur, as the credibility and influence of Germany and France
is diminished to the extent of their check books.
Can Europe Consolidate?:
Industry Must Focus on Winnable Markets
Featured in
Defense News (July 14, 2003)
Efforts to strengthen Europe's defense
industry through consolidation have not worked because they miss
the real problem: the fragmentation of the powerful European customer
base. The future looks bleak, but there is a way out that would
support not only European firms, but the global defense industry.
European defense companies must strip resources from programs
and capabilities that are certain market losers, and invest in
areas where they can compete against the
U.S. giants.
Europe has responded to the emergence of
colossal U.S. firms by forming several large amalgams of its own,
but size alone was never the real issue. The share performances
of the largest consolidated European companies, BAE Systems and
the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co. (EADS), trail those
of their smaller, nimbler, more competitive rivals Saab and Dassault.
And the French firm has been profitable for 40 years.
Why? Europe's governments did not permit
the newly merged entities to realize many of consolidation's potential
benefits: reducing headcount, restructuring facilities, consolidating
product lines, and merging headquarters and chief executives.
The Eurofighter, for instance, will be assembled in each of four
partner countries, and may be assembled in more.
Meanwhile, Europe's governments continue
to produce paltry budgets for defense research - collectively
just a third of U.S. R&D spending - and acquisition. In many
areas, governments proceed with research, development and even
acquisition work that repeats what a neighbor country is doing.
And because European militaries generally buy equipment in much
smaller lots than the Pentagon, their suppliers must do more work
per unit sold. Each nation
has unique acquisition requirements, people and processes that
require separate efforts in research and development, system design,
marketing, production and delivery. Portuguese officials wanted
to buy only three A400M transport planes, but they still had to
be courted, listened to, designed for and sold to. Then they left
the program.
Consolidation to date has failed. The complex
intertwining of Europe's firms has led to cannibalistic behavior.
The Saab Gripen, EADS/Alenia/BAE Systems Eurofighter and Dassault
Rafale fighters compete, yet EADS owns a larger share of Rafale
(through its Dassault holding) than it does of Eurofighter. BAE
Systems owns more of Gripen than it does of Eurofighter (through
its 50 percent holding of Gripen International and 35 percent
of Saab AB), but it also participates in 15 percent of the F-35
Joint Strike Fighter. No wonder Europe's defense industry appears
leaderless and directionless.
EADS, which is working to consume Thales
and Dassault, is searching for ways to ensnare BAE, Finmeccanica
and Saab. BAE, which wants to become an American company in all
regards, is seeking a major U.S. acquisition or merger and a $10
billion chunk of the Pentagon budget. But BAE Systems' troubles
with the Nimrod MRA4, the Astute submarine, etc., have hobbled
it to the extent that three U.S. value funds have purchased more
than 30 percent of the stock.
Meanwhile, EADS is working to consume Thales
and Dassault, while searching for ways to ensnare BAE, Finmeccanica
and Saab. If BAE fails in its trans-Atlantic reach, look for a
two-pole European industry: EADS owning Thales and Dassault, and
BAE leading Finmeccanica and Saab. All these outcomes are bad
for Europe and the United States. The better solution is an open
and distributed global aerospace industry, where comparative advantage
can push performance up and costs down. If European companies
offered world-beating solutions, no buy-America rule or technology-transfer
restrictions would keep them out of the U.S. market.
European defense should retreat from sectors
where it cannot compete, and focus instead on the poorly met needs
of the world's defense marketplace. For example, it's tough for
large U.S. firms to go from building $50 million fighter jets
to $5 million unmanned aerial vehicles, so they build $50 million
UAVs instead. But companies like Dassault and Saab can be very
comfortable with the revenues generated by a prosperous, low-cost
UAV business. Neither is the United States untouchable in launch
vehicles: from Ariane to Long March, non-U.S. commercial launch
companies have been able to win customers. In the field of advanced
lightweight armored vehicles, the German military employed diesel/electric-hybrid
scout cars long before the U.S. military began thinking about
transformation. And there are even more opportunities below the
platform level.
It is time to stop banking on ineffective
consolidation or hoping for a change in the customer. European
defense leaders need to pick areas for investment, and coldly
limit that list to match the money available. Resources must be
pulled from losing markets and programs and sent where advantage
can be won and kept. This means abandoning national prestige markets,
like fighters, and recognizing that platforms matter less than
capabilities.
European defense companies can re-establish
an important place for themselves in the global defense market,
an outcome that is good for European and U.S. defense companies,
as well as for Europe and the United States.
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