
FRATRICIDE: TRAGIC BUT INEVITABLE…

Sadly, the Ministry of Defence has announced the deaths of three more servicemen on active duty in
It seems that the deaths on Thursday occurred during a patrol where what is termed ‘Close Air Support’ was required. ‘CAS’, as it is known, is a tactical application of air power where armed aircraft are employed in direct support of friendly troops in contact with enemy forces. It has its roots in the First World War and has been used extensively in warfare ever since. Although modern technology has changed the way in which CAS is conducted (for example allowing CAS to be successfully conducted at night) there are enduring characteristics associated with its use. These include the significant impact the firepower provided by CAS can have on the immediate ground battle and the high risks associated with delivering lethal weapons on enemy forces that are in very close proximity to friendly troops. So the first point to recognize is that CAS is a dangerous but very necessary use of air power in support of land units. Fortunately, enhancements in technology, army-air force inter-operability, joint training, air-ground communication and weapon accuracy have steadily reduced the incidence of so called ‘blue-on-blue’ tragedies, but the reality (especially in such a complex and ill-defined battlefield as Afghanistan) is that fratricide can be minimised but not eradicated, and that ‘blue-on-blue’ episodes, though increasingly remote, will continue to be integral to warfare for the foreseeable future.
The employment of air power in a ‘conventional’ high intensity war is complicated by many factors that are absent from the conflict in
Although of little comfort to those affected by Thursday’s tragedy, the final point of note is that there are many British soldiers and marines alive today who owe a great debt to the Close Air Support they received in
RUSI