Information Warfare: Reachback to Poland

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November 17, 2024: NATO has moved its three decade-old reachback support operations to Poland. Reachback electronically connects troops in a combat zone with a large number of tech experts and other support personnel stationed anywhere else in the world, but generally in the US. Its primary active operations are now in Poland, near the Ukrainian border. This speeds up repairs and improved maintenance for the many weapons and munitions NATO has and still is supplying to Ukraine.

The war in Ukraine is unique because of the large number of new (to Ukrainians) weapons that have arrived since the Russians invaded in early 2022. The countries sending this gear cannot send their own personnel to Ukraine to help maintain or repair the new weapons and equipment. Since Ukraine is not a NATO member, NATO nations do not send their own troops or technicians into Ukraine.

Poland has also become the place where Ukrainians can come for training by NATO personnel as that is often inconvenient, impossible and illegal in Ukraine. A solution was soon found by updating the reachback technique. After the first Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2014, NATO military and tech advisors went to Ukraine and established good relationships with the Ukrainians they supported. This often included trainers of support techs leaving Ukraine after their terms of service were up, would give Ukrainians their cell phone number and call any time they had an emergency the departing expert could help with. These NATO trainers in Ukraine had to leave after the 2022 Russian invasion started, so group video software like Zoom was added so groups of Ukrainians could participate in a tutorial by someone outside Ukraine on how to use, maintain or repair some new bit of equipment. The Ukrainians have been very resourceful and inventive themselves and recognized the enhanced reachback capability as yet another way to make their military more effective than the Russians.

Reachback has been heavily used by American forces since the 1990s. This has been the case even when the United States has very few troops on the ground in places like Iraq and Syria. In those situations, the Americans had to be resourceful finding targets for the coalition of NATO, Arab and other allied warplanes to attack from above. Just because the attacks were being made with precision munitions did not eliminate the risk of civilian casualties. There have been few of these, and none are ignored on the ground because Arab Islamic terrorists will invent them if they can to rally more support to their cause.

There have been so few civilian casualties because the coalition used new American intelligence techniques. This system uses many analysts based anywhere, but largely in the United States, who carefully examine the aircraft and drone video and still photos for information that identifies Islamic terrorists and any nearby civilians. This is not easy just using overhead video and some electronic intercepts. The analysts do have software and electronic tools to get more out of the images and electronic chatter. Within minutes, hours or days the analysts can provide highly accurate, and safe from the possibility of civilian casualties, GPS coordinates. Sometimes armed drones or aircraft are already overhead, waiting to be directed to a specific target.

This concept, which the U.S. began developing in the 1990s and used with increasing frequency after September 11, 2001, was called reachback. Originally this meant that some parts of a unit ordered overseas would remain in the United States and use Internet-like communications capabilities to do their work from their home base. Sending fewer people overseas is a major advantage, as it means less transportation, and supply effort is needed. Since the 1990s it has been noted that modern communications make it practical for some support units to stay behind, with no loss in effectiveness in the entire unit. Reservists make for better reachback troops, because they have to go through more additional combat training before being sent overseas. Moreover, the reservists can be taken on and off active duty as the workload changes.

Reachback works particularly well for intelligence work. With reachback, the few intel personnel in the combat zone are mainly there to work with local counterparts and provide them with intel collected by the drones and other sources. For the Iraq/Syria operation, which involves several hundred manned aircraft, drones and several satellites, the reachback intel operation in the United States has been equally large, so that analysts can be quickly switched to the most important possible targets. Often, though, the analysts are looking at a battle area stakeout that can last several days to weeks or more to identify who the targets are, where they fight from, where they live, where they store their supplies, especially ammunition and explosives, and which vehicles they use. In addition more detailed information is collected like where the enemy forces operate from, which could be bunkers, buildings or ruins where they place snipers or other portable weapons.

Once the analysts believe they have the most targets they are going to find, they send the target list off to the waiting targeting analysts in the Middle East and the airstrikes are carried out as quickly as possible. The bombers have their own video cameras in their targeting pods so pilots can double check for the presence of civilians or anything else the original analysts noted. In some cases, all the analysts back in the United States have to do is confirm the identity and location of a major leader or a meeting of key people. This will usually be attacked by a single aircraft or drone. The Islamic terrorists know that when several warplanes appear overhead bad things are probably about to happen to them.

The same analyst teams used for air strikes in Syria and Iraq are composed of people with lots of experience at this. While their recent experience might be in Afghanistan or Yemen, Somalia and now Ukraine, most spent time covering Iraq operations before 2011. Many of these analysts have retired. Some have been persuaded to return and help out with operations in Ukraine. The important thing is these men and women have lots of experience and skill with quickly adapting to new analysis software and the many major updates since 2001. All this is made possible because of reachback. The main benefit is that reachback enables a lot of troops to operate from a foreign base without being there. Many other nations are noticing.

One of the most frequent uses of reachback is the operation of the larger American Predator and Reaper drones. It involves operating drones with crews connected via satellite communications. In 2014 the United States established an intelligence base in Niger, which is the eastern neighbor of Mali and just south of Algeria and Libya. Only a hundred Americans are stationed there, most of them to maintain several American drones that fly surveillance missions over Mali. Thanks to satellite communications, this base has hundreds of other people involved in what it is doing, almost as if they were there, by using reachback. For example, most of the people actually operating the drones are back in the United States. Operating drones is very labor intensive, as you need a pilot and one or more sensor operators for something like the Predator or Reaper. In addition, you need shifts of operators because these air force drones typically stay in the air for 12-36 hours at a time. So having the operators back in the United States greatly reduces the number of people you have overseas. The drone maintenance crews get the aircraft ready for take off and on the airstrip. But after that the flight operations crew back in the U.S. can take over.

Enhanced reachback has provided Ukrainian forces with yet another advantage over their Russian adversaries.

 

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