Dan Snow's History Hit - Can Air Power Alone Topple Governments?
Episode Date: March 10, 2026With the Iran war still unfolding, we ask the question: Can air power alone topple a government?From the First World War onward, military strategists have argued that bombing from the air could break ...a nation’s will and force political change without costly ground invasions. Today, we test that claim through a century of conflict - from WWI to NATO's intervention in Kosovo in the 1990s.Joining us is Mike Pavelec, a military historian at McGill University, to provide some insight into the efficacy of air power.Produced by James Hickmann and edited by Dougal Patmore.Dan Snow's History Hit is now available on YouTube! Check it out at: https://www.youtube.com/@DSHHPodcastSign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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human beings being what we are.
As soon as we first took to the skies in flight,
we started thinking about how to use that new skill to kill someone.
I'm sure it's the case that when we managed to float for the first time,
to take to a boat, when we managed to dig underground for the first time,
I'm pretty confident that before long we were raiding a store of grain across a river
or burrowing under a defensive wall.
We first entered space to strike at our enemies.
The cyber dimension, that was pretty much created by military money and technology.
And thus it was that just eight years after Wilbur Wright flew the world's first heavy-than-air machine
on its epic 100-feet flight in 1903, an Italian.
Giulio Gavotti was dropping hand grenades out of the cockpit of his plane flying over Libya.
when we humans enter a new dimension, we fight in it.
It's almost admirable how quickly some people came to regard the aerial dimension, flight, as potentially decisive.
By the First World War, Stratius were arguing that planes weren't just useful as tactical weapons,
so they weren't useful for dropping those grenades on people on the ground,
killing and maiming people on the ground, or spotting where the enemy was,
or correcting the fall of artillery fire.
They weren't just useful getting that battlefield advantage,
They might actually negate the whole battlefield itself.
They might bypass it entirely.
They might be strategic weapons.
They might win wars by themselves, these aircraft.
No more lice-ridden, hollow-cheeked young men in dugouts.
No more wading through mud and blood, advancing across a shattered landscape,
across a carpet of corpses.
No more colossal expense of keeping vast armies fed and clothed and unethed and unlawful.
armed. And importantly, no more coffins hauled through the streets of towns and cities. No more
guards of honour, eyes down, arms reversed. No more weeping families, bad headlines or furious,
bereaved voters. Air power could be a breakthrough technology, a decisive weapon. Fewer casualties,
quicker, cheaper wars. A tempting prospect. Winston Churchill himself put it,
just after the First World War.
It may be possible to affect economies
during the course of the present year,
as he put it by holding territory
through the agency of the Air Force
rather than by military force.
Winston Churchill was launching himself
into a furious debate
that was raging at the time
and has never actually been resolved.
And this is a debate that is fought in classrooms
and conferences by theorists,
but unlike many such disputes,
it has the most dramatic and massive real world
world consequences. Tens of millions of people have been killed, maimed, de-housed and traumatized in the
last 100 years or so by strategists who believe that military and political decisions, results,
can be delivered by using aerial weapons alone. Now, it's one of the strangest, I think one of the
quirkiest of historical facts that the first attempt to use air power as a strategic weapon.
So, like I say, not to help things long on the ground, but to attempt to force an enemy government to radically change its direction.
Well, that first attempt ended up with bombs dropping on provincial British towns and villages that had known little fighting since the Vikings.
The sleepy Norfolk towns of Kings Lynn, Great Yarmouth and a few others.
It was the evening of the 19th of July 1915, and it was a deeply incongrued.
place for the birth of a way of war of a doctrine that injures in strikes that are almost
certainly taking place as you listen to this in Tehran, in Kiev, perhaps in Dubai, in other cities.
On that occasion in 1915, German zeppelin bombers flying to Britain were, I quote,
attempting to diminish the enemy determination to prosecute the war. That night they were
headed for the industrial Humber estuary. They got waylaid because of strong.
winds and dropped all their bombs in the wrong place. Four people were killed that night.
Among them the 26-year-old Alice Grazley, a young woman already widowed by their horrific
fighting on the Western Front. She and those other three victims were the first of so many.
In this episode of Dan Snow's history, we're going to try and work out when and indeed if.
Air power alone has ever been truly decisive. Can you bomb a place, a building, some people,
a palace, a country to control what happens there?
Have air strikes alone ever, in the last 120 years,
brought about a change on the ground,
roughly speaking in line with the intentions of the power that drops the bombs?
Has, for example, aerial bombardment ever once removed an authoritarian regime
and replaced it with something even a little bit more democratic?
Here, to answer that question is an old friend, a veteran of this podcast, Mike Pavlik.
He was a professor at the US Air Command and Staff College.
he's now at McGill University. He's written many wonderful books. He's got a really big survey of
US air power from start to finish coming out very soon. So folks, trap in, join us as we
throttle back as we attempt to answer this essential question. What are the strengths? What is the
potential of? But also what are the limits of air power? Can you win a war by air alone?
dropped on Hiroshima.
God save the king.
No black quaint unity
till there is first than black unity.
Never to go to war with one another again.
And lift off and the shuttle has cleared the power.
Mike, good to see again, bud.
Thanks, coming on the pod.
You too. Absolutely.
Anytime.
You think I only get in touch you when there's a big emergency.
But, you know, I think about you all the time, dude, I promise.
But that's okay because there's lots of emergencies, right?
That's right. That's damn true.
It's all about strategic air power.
episode. First of all, can you just give me the quick 101? What is the difference between strategic
air power and tactical air power, like air assets that try and influence a battlefield, but don't try
and have a strategic effect by themselves? Yeah. So, and this is a great debate within airpower theory.
The idea is air power in the 1920s, after the First World War, the theorists come along and they say,
listen, air power is more than just the tip of the spear and the ground battles that will determine
whether or not an army wins or loses a Clausewitzian kind of concept.
We can use air power to fly over rivers and English channels and mountains and international
borders avoiding the front lines and avoiding the militaries and actually have a strategic
impact on, fully aware of that pun, the impact on civilian populations, financial
centers, government installations, and sway the course of wars by attacking the brain trust
rather than just the militaries at the front. The militaries at the front, of course,
protect the frontiers. If you look at the First World War and anything prior to air power,
and to get to the Capitol, if you think of the Napoleonic period, for example, Napoleon has to get
through the Austrian army to get to Vienna. By the time you have air power, especially after the
First World War, where they actually try this, and the Germans are the first to do it when they
attack London, 1915 through 1918. The idea is go straight to the heart of the matter, financial
institutions, the government centers, civilian population centers, and bomb them into submission.
And so the idea is not just to destroy the armies at the front, but to basically avoid them
and go straight at where the decisions are actually made.
And it's an intoxicating idea, right, Mike? So you go, look up, we've just spent four years
chewing barbed wire on the western front in the hellish mountains northern Italy, in the hideous
Balkans on the east of a nightmare, East Africa. Imagine if we'd have to do all that. You don't have to
kill a load of 18-year-olds. You just go straight, you get your little old plane, you fly straight over
the Kaiser's Palace and drop a bomb on him. Indeed. And you can see why this kind of infects people,
right, and has ever since. In fact, that's kind of what the Israelis and Americans are staying
today. We can have a strategic effect without going to all this trouble and heartbreak and bloodshed
of guys in the mud on the ground.
Indeed, and that's been the prophecy
or the prediction of air power
since the very beginning.
So it's really Hugh Trenchard in Britain
who comes out of the war
after he's in charge of the independent bombing force,
bombing the roar, because the airplanes can only,
they can't reach Berlin, they can reach the roar,
and so he tries to destroy a German industry
and capabilities of making weapons in the roar.
But he comes out after the First World War,
and he's going to be the first one in charge of the new Air Force,
the Royal Air Force,
the destruction of the material is important, but the destruction of enemy psychology is 20 to one
what it is to destroying the material. And he makes it up. He has no basis for the math. But because
he's in charge, everybody's like, oh, you're brilliant and this is fantastic, and we love it. And it's all
a psychological battle at that point to destroy the enemy's willingness to continue fighting. And
there's this will versus means argument throughout the entire 1920s and 1930s, where the Americans
will focus on things they can measure and destroying enemy means, the factories, the oil production,
airplane production, things like that. And that's what they'll take into the Second World War.
And that's Billy Mitchell's argument. But the British will continue to say, no, no, no, we're going
to destroy the enemy will. And you get people like Bomber Harris. It's like, we can only find cities
at night. And there's a whole other story in there. But we will destroy the German willingness to
be able to fight so that they'll rise up against their government and they'll quit the war.
And part of this, the concept of this is if you look at the end of the First World War, there is social
revolution. There's no argument that there isn't. There is social revolution in Germany. There is
social revolution in the Soviet Union, which creates the Soviet Union. But the revolutions are what
the air power theorists want to create with air power. So they want to bomb civilians. They want to bomb
government cities, the centers of power, St. Petersburg in the case of the Russians, Berlin in the case of the Germans,
and get the people to rise up against the governments like they did at the end of 1917,
1918.
And the mechanism or the logical argument is that bombing from the air with relative impunity
can force these social revolution.
So the logic is sound.
It doesn't always work that way, obviously, but the logic is that using air power,
the country with better air power and more air power can create social revolution in their
enemy's camps.
The British will carry that theory into the Second World War that we can disrupt enemy psychology
enough to get them to quit fighting. The Americans in the inner war period will focus on destroying
the enemy's capability to be able to fight, tanks, airplanes, oil, et cetera, because it can be
measured. The Americans, as you know, love to be able to measure things. And the metrics are a whole
lot easier to judge than the emotional status or the psychology of your enemy. And so that's the
Americans during the day, the combined bomber offensive, you and I have done a lot on this. The
combined bomber offensive is the Americans during the day trying to destroy German planes and German
industry and German oil and transportation. And the British at night are burning German cities
trying to disrupt the German psychology and willingness to continue fighting.
I want to get away from the theory now. And let's look at some of the historical examples.
Let's start with really the first concerted strategic air campaign in history.
It's the First World War.
It's the Germans trying to change the British trajectory in the First World War.
It did not work out.
No, it didn't.
The influence of strategic bombing by the Germans was overestimated and overpressed and overpressed
and simply didn't have the effects that they wanted.
The Germans will attempt to do it in 1915 with the Zeppelins.
And then by 1917 with the heavier than air bombers.
but there isn't a concentration. There isn't enough destruction. This is what the theorists say after
the war. There isn't enough destruction. So they can excuse that failure. They didn't go hard enough.
Indeed. And the idea of the populations themselves and the resiliency of the civilian populations is
underestimated. And so you look at the British population. And there's an interesting and important
psychological component here with the idea of hopelessness. And so in the psychology literature,
You have this concept where if the society can defend itself or if the society can find a way through the pressure and the pain of the bombing, then it's not going to affect them the way that is predicted by air power theorists.
So if you follow me on this thread, the British are still protected by the Royal Navy.
The British are still protected a little bit by the Royal Air Force.
They reassign squadrons back from the Western Front back to Britain to defend against the airplanes.
and it's tough without any radar or anything to see them coming.
Once the airplanes are overhead, they're way up there
and the British can't really intercept them very well.
They can shoot down some on their way out as they're going back to Germany.
But the idea is the British are not helpless.
They think that they can defend it.
They think they can stiff upper lip this whole thing,
and they can survive, they can prevail.
And so the German efforts at strategic bombing in the First World War,
the concept in practice with bombing London, the financial center, the government center,
the Sudanian population, which is seen as the soft underbelly, the British are much more stoic
and they can survive it. And so they're going to say, well, what we'll do is we'll just kill more
Germans on the, on the Western Front. Creating the psychological damage relies on forcing
a hopeless position on a population where they have no other choice except to surrender.
And that's the cost-benefit analysis of modern war, is whether or not it's,
It's valuable enough to keep fighting or to surrender or come to some sort of stalemate or some sort of negotiation to end the war because it costs too much blood, treasure, whatever, than just sort of capitulating.
So in the case of the British in the First World War and the Second World War with the Battle of Britain, that hopelessness was never created.
the British are stoic and the British are able to overcome the dangers or the threat of complete
annihilation and stand up against the Germans and stay in the war. The Germans attempt to knock
the British out of the war in the First World War and the Second World War with air power
alone. There's really no threat of invasion. So the British are able to say, no, no, we can still
defend against this. We're not going to give up. So there is a psychological component. It's just that
it's really, really hard to measure. And you never really know when you as the aggressor are going to
force that situation on an enemy population or an enemy leadership. Okay, so the First World War,
that German attempt to knock Britain out from the air did not work. There is an interesting little
mini example that has an outsized impact, doesn't it, which is in the 1920s in Iraq, which has its
historical echoes. And the British, the cash-strap British, they cannot anymore after First World War
send vast columns of British or British Indian troops around the empire as they once did or around
anywhere like they once did. And suddenly this looks like a cheap way of doing it. Like they can send
these aircraft, they can cover vast distances, they can strike at the enemy, in this case,
tribal leaders, the kind of concentrations of tribal fighters. Is it fair to say it's quite effective?
So this looks like this is air power only. So this is air power for a strategic effect, and it looks like it's working. It's pacifying these tribes across this big sway of the territory. The British find itself controlling after the First World War. It is. Absolutely. The British call it air policing. And they send the RAF, the brand new RAF, because they need, partly they need a reason to keep funding it and keep building airplanes. But the idea of independent Royal Air Force in the Middle East is a relatively cheaper option. It's not
cheap, but it's cheaper than divisions of soldiers. It's cheaper than capital ships and things like
that. But you also have to realize that this is a time when the majority of humans on the planet
have never seen aviation, have never seen airplanes. And so it's a psychological effect as much
as anything in that all of a sudden these machines in the air are shooting at us and killing us.
And so there is a psychological component for people who've never seen airplanes before. Now,
in the modern era when people have seen airplanes and they know what airplanes can do,
it's a little bit less psychologically effective.
But you have this concept of maintaining the empire in very, very tribal regions and very
primitive regions, if you will, the developing world, where using aircraft to drop bombs
or resupply or shoot from the air, you can control the areas more effectively because
of the way that they're used.
And so the British will put biplanes and machine guns and cars with, it rolls
Royces with machine guns on them for mobility and for speed and maneuver and, like you said,
to fly over different sort of geographical features.
And using air power are able to subdue some of the insurgencies in the Middle East
during the time that the British have this enormous massive colonial empire
and are able to assert control.
through force using the new medium of air power. The Iraqis, these mobile forces, these insurgents,
realize that they do not have any defense against RAF air power. They're still shooting single-shot
rifles and muskets and riding around on horseback and camels, and they are in no way able to defend
themselves against the Royal Air Force and even these very incredibly, to us, primitive biplanes.
And so the RAF is able to use air power for success.
There's a British battalion that's trapped inside of a city, a town.
And the insurgents are trying to kill all of them.
And the RAF is able to bring in bags of grain and ammunition and things like that.
I'm strapped, literally strapped under the wings of these biplanes and resupply the group of
soldiers inside this little town.
And the insurgents realize that they're not going to ever beat the British.
because they have resupply, because they have ways in and out, because they have air power.
And so it creates in the insurgents or the Iraqis the idea that, okay, the British have a
technology, have a capability that we don't have, we can't defend against, and they're going
to take advantage of this asymmetric advantage of our non-technological forces to the point
where we can no longer fight against them effectively. And it's able to subdue, plus a lot of
political stuff and buying off the right warlords, et cetera, et cetera.
But the idea of not being able to defend against it,
and it will work at a tactical level, maybe not a strategic loan.
You listen to Dan Snow's history.
We're talking about strategic bombing.
More coming up.
That's true.
Okay.
So lots of interesting things going on in the desert there.
But it's, as you say, lots of other related activities and very small scale as well.
Again, it's a very particular type of enemy as well.
Spanish Civil War, there's a huge ground component.
People have heard of Gernica.
That was a successful bombing campaign, but it was a bombing campaign that was then followed
up by ground forces that were pushing north into the Basque Country.
So it's not kind of what we're talking about right here, which is we're trying to
talk about times when people have attempted to win wars through air power only.
You've mentioned the Blitz, the Battle of Britain.
There is the Allied bombing of Germany, the Americans by day, the British by night.
That, I'm afraid to say, did not deliver the results that the British in particular were hoping
it might have brought the end of the war closer,
but that's because of the damage that's being done to Germany,
the physical damage, the railroads, the tank production, all that kind of stuff.
The German population do not rise up and throw off the Nazis
that in case people are wondering.
That's the great tragedy.
So it doesn't work there.
Japan, in combination with gigantic Soviet armies rampaging towards the Japanese home islands,
massive fleets amassing to conquer Japanese homeland,
air power does have a very important effect
after the delivery of those atomic weapons?
Absolutely.
So at the end of the war in the Pacific,
somewhere between August 9th and September 15th,
the surrender documents are signed on September 15th.
You have to realize, and this is for the listeners,
there's still a million and a half Japanese soldiers in mainland China.
Their military is not defeated.
The emperor makes the decision that they're going to stop fighting
simply because of this hopelessness
is created by American air power,
plus all those other variables.
The American submarine campaign has sunk 85% of Japanese merchant shipping.
They have no stuff coming in and out of the Japanese home island.
The Americans have threatened an invasion by November if the Japanese don't quit.
And some of the statistics and some of the predictions are that Americans are going to lose
another half a million to two million killed if they have to invade the Japanese home islands.
Because the kamikazis have proven that the Japanese are going to fight to the death.
It's a different mindset.
It's a different kind of war in 1945.
But the Americans have burned Japanese cities.
64 of the largest 66 Japanese cities are more than 50% destroyed.
The two atomic bombs.
And the Japanese by the summer of 1945 have no air defenses left.
They don't have any airplanes.
Their anti-aircraft can't hit the B-29s because the B-29s are coming in at night.
Society is in complete chaos.
And so the Japanese emperor is like, okay,
We're going to quit. But the idea of the defeat of the Japanese military, whereas the Red Army
rolls the German military, and the German military is completely just destroyed by the end of
the war in Europe. The Japanese military is not necessarily destroyed. The home islands are in
disarray, but the Japanese military is still in China and Vietnam, which is another story. They have to be
dealt with after the war. But the United States of America has created a situation where the emperor is
like we can no longer continue with a war without completely losing our entire society.
And the United States signal that they're going to let the emperor stay in his office,
that they're not going to kill the emperor.
They're not going to remove the emperor.
The emperor is going to be allowed to stay.
And so by the Americans giving concessions, but also making bigger threats,
with the atomic bombs, with all the other things that are happening,
the emperor has the ability to, if you'll allow that, to declare that they are in a hopeless situation
and are going to not necessarily surrender.
He never actually uses the word surrender,
but they're not going to continue the war against the Americans
and the Soviets, the Allies.
And so it has created a situation where seemingly air power
has an enormous influence on the end of the Pacific War,
but all the other pieces are equally as important,
if even not more important.
The atomic bomb is, some would argue,
the signal to the Soviets that, hey, we now have this capacity,
so don't overextend, you're welcome.
But what you get in Asia,
of course, is that everything is divided up, and you have North Korea and South Korea after the war.
You have the Soviet sphere of influence. You have all kinds of craziness that continues in China with
their civil war continuing immediately after the Japanese are disarmed. You have problems that are
going to happen in Southeast Asia with French, Indochina, et cetera, et cetera. I mean, these things all
lead into each other. But the bombing of Japan seems to vindicate, and then the United States
strategic bombing survey, volumes and volumes of analysis of metrics of economists and actuaries
that go in and study these things, they will insist that it was the bombing that won the war.
And so there's this mythology that's created at the end of the war, that air power does win
the war and kind of everything else is ignored. But then you get the independence of the United States
Air Force in 1947 based on this concept that air power can win wars.
Okay, so we are not going to notch up the surrender of Japan, the defeat of Japan, the Pacific,
as a victory for strategic air power alone in 1945.
There were too many other factors at play there as well.
Yeah, absolutely no.
I mean, it is a factor, and it might even be the most important factor, but it's not the only factor.
Okay, so this list is looking a bit thin of successful, of wars won by using air parallel.
Let's keep going.
Where do you want to go next, bud?
Because obviously, you know, Korea, a lot of air going on in Korea, but there's a huge amount.
fighting on the ground and on the coast around creek. I mean, is it LOW? Is it in Southeast Asia and during
the Cold War what we call Vietnam War? I mean, where's the best other example of an attempt made
pretty much only in the air to bring about a big strategic effect on the ground? Or is it in North Korea?
Yeah, so. We're entering a whole world of pain here, but so I appreciate that you're making this
simple for us. No, that's fine. This is what I do. Let's just go chronologically. The best example is
1999, Kosovo. I'll get there. Korea, the United States Air Force,
tries to wage the war like they did in the Second World War by destroying Korean industry and
the soldiers on the ground, et cetera, using strategic bombing. It doesn't work because Korea is
less industrialized than either Germany or Japan were. And the American forces are not allowed to go into
China, where the Koreans put a lot of staging areas and industry, et cetera, et cetera. And because
the Chinese border is sacrosanct, they can't bomb in China. And so the North Koreans have a sanctuary.
In Vietnam, the United States is only willing to use air power in North Vietnam to try to convince the North Vietnamese to stop supplying the insurgency in the South.
And by that point, you get to 64 when the United States really gets involved.
The idea is, well, we're going to have troops on the ground in South Vietnam to try to stabilize that Democratic.
Democratic in air quotes, because you don't have visual of this, but democratic regime.
But only air power against the North.
there's no incursion on the ground into the north,
although the Americans do try to isolate the North Vietnamese
by putting troops in Laos and Cambodia later on.
They'll be pulled out of there.
But again, North Vietnam has sanctuary in China,
and China's giving them a lot of supplies.
The Soviets are giving them a lot of supplies.
And the president, Johnson at the time,
says you can't bomb Hanoi and Haifong
because we don't want this to get out of control.
And there would be a Soviet response
in West Berlin, for example.
And so air power is used to interdict and to destroy anti-aircraft facilities and try to keep
the trucks from rolling south on the Ho Chi Man Trail and try to disrupt supply lines of oil
and things like that.
But the insurgents in the South need literally 30 bullets and a bag of rice a day kind of
thing.
So the requirements, the logistics requirements for the southern insurgency is relatively small.
If you look at the Hocuman offensive, 1968, and then again in 1972, the two offensives that the North Vietnamese do launch across the border, the American Air Power is able to deal with it very well because the North Vietnamese tried to transition to conventional war, meaning tanks and trucks and...
Yeah, they're driving tanks on roads.
Yeah.
And American Air Power chews it up.
And so they're like, oh, we're not going to fight against American Air Power.
So by 1972, when Nixon's in the office and he's like, well, he's like, well, he's...
with honor, we're going to get out. By changing the political objectives of just we want to get out,
the North Vietnamese are like, yeah, no problem, see you later, especially after the Christmas
bombings where the B-52s are unleashed against the capital city, Hanoi, and the port city of Haifong.
And the air power thinkers after that are going to go, oh, see if we could have bombed the North
Vietnamese capital earlier, we would have won. And it's like, okay, but what do you mean by winning?
Are you going to convince the North to not support either unification or the insurgency in the
South, are you going to stabilize a very unpopular, quote unquote, democratic government in the South
with air power? And Vietnam is just a fascinating case study, but it's doomed from the start.
And the United States keeps trying to do this and keeps trying to. And a lot of air power is
employed against North Vietnam. The United States ends up dropping more bombs on South Vietnam
and Cambodian layouts than they do on the North. And so it's just such a bizarre story of the
application of air power, which is absolutely inappropriate and completely disorganized.
And, you know, sorry for my Vietnam veterans, but I think they realize that the political
considerations took precedence over the military considerations, but I don't really think that
air power could have changed the outcomes of that one very much. It forestalls the North taking the
South for 15 years, let's say. But eventually, of course, the North Vietnamese invade the South
again in 1975, and we simply don't go back.
back. And so South Vietnam ceases to exist simply because, not because of air power, but because of
political considerations and decisions that are made. So, Mike, we're coming to the mid-90s in the late
90s. Let's go to the Balkans. Unless there's any good examples in the 70s you want to talk about,
lots of air power being used. Israelis are trashing the, it's Arab neighbors, Air Forces in 67,
for example, a lot of air power in 73. But these are, they're not air power only battles.
The air theorists, the air proponents, get very excited about the Balkans, right?
Tell us why.
Indeed.
So, I mean, the Balkans is in crisis, and it's super confusing because you have all kinds of different parties.
And anyway, the short version is, let's go straight to 1999.
And this is after the collapse of the Dayton Accords and all this.
And Slobodan-Losovic is in Serbia.
And he hates the Kosovo's.
Let's just put the cards on the table.
He's conducting genocide against Kosovo-Albanian.
Kosovo wants independence.
It's part of Serbia.
He doesn't want them to have independence, et cetera, et cetera.
And so he's killing Kosovo.
And NATO will say, hey, knock it off.
We don't like that because you have new media, you have international opinion, public opinion,
and you have pictures coming out.
It's pretty grim.
And so NATO decides that NATO's going to go in with air power alone.
And Bill Clinton is the president at this point.
He's like, we're not going to put troops on the ground.
And he says this openly, which creates in and of itself its own talking point.
point, but he says, we're going to go in with air power, and we're going to coerce Slobodan
Milosevic to stop killing Kosovirs. That's a whole point. Not a lot about independence,
not a lot about anything else other than, you know, stop the genocide. And so NATO gets together
and they fly out of Italy across the Adriatic there. And air power will be used to convince
Slobodan Milosevic to stop killing people. Okay. Initially planned as a three-day campaign,
you know, here's a little bit of pressure, here's a little bit of pain, we want you to not do this.
So the political objectives are relatively small.
It's not even about replacing a government or anything like that.
It's just stop killing people.
Pre-day campaign turns into an 11-day campaign turns into a 78-day air campaign.
It's problematic.
Even though there have been some really interesting technological developments, which are part of the conversation.
So the Americans have developed stealth by this point, and they've also developed precision-guided munitions.
And precision guided munitions with GPS, where the GPS signal from the satellites tells the bombs where to fall incredibly precise on the order of meters rather than carpet bombing Hamburg in the Second World War with thousands upon thousands of bombers.
You can send one airplane between two and 16 bombs, and you can hit two to 16 targets depending on your bomb load.
And the Americans will bomb military stuff first.
tanks, anti-aircraft, Sam sites, surfs to air missile sites, etc. But the Serbs were really,
really good at camouflage and moving stuff around. And they were all using pretty decent Soviet
ex-Soviet equipment by that point. And so it was tough. And the weather in Serbia can be
really, really rough with lots of rain. And the train, if you've ever been there, is like very
hilly mountainous and et cetera and not really developed. And so they would go off road and couldn't find
this stuff. And they would move it on a regular basis.
Then you get the problem with the NATO coalition, which was any one country could veto any one target.
They'd fix that afterwards.
But the idea was, for example, I'm not pointing fingers here, but the French would say, oh, no, you can't bomb that because it's culturally important.
Or the Germans would say, oh, no, you can't bomb that because for whatever reason.
Anybody could veto it.
Finally, the Americans will say, okay, the American airplanes will bomb the things that we want to bomb.
You can do whatever you want.
So there's a command issue.
I won't say failure, but issue.
But it takes time, and the Americans can't find, NATO can't find the lever to get Slobodan Milosevic to stop doing what he's doing.
And so they'll expand the target portfolio.
And at one point in the 40th or 50th days, the Americans bomb a cigarette factory.
That's the cigarette factory of one of Slobodan Amelosovic's buddies.
And they try to attack the leadership oligarchy to get them.
to put pressure on Slobod Anelosovich because he's not listening to his own population.
And they'll start bombing like yachts of his friends.
And they start bombing different targets that would have financial pressure of his friends.
And then the CIA finds out about, and this is all open source now, because it's hilarious
story, finds out the landline number of his wife.
And they call her every hour on the hour for a couple of days and say, hey, tell your husband
and stop killing Kosovars.
And then they stop calling, which is even more disruptive.
and then they call it random times.
And so there's a psychological operations,
there's electromagnetic spectrum operations,
there's radio, there's television,
there's the bombing and all of these things
working together to try to get Slobod and I'm Lozvich.
And finally, the Americans and NATO
were able to put enough pressure on Slobodan Milosevic's friends
and the oligarchy to get him to stop killing Kosovoires.
Or did he just kill enough that he was satisfied?
He stops.
He finally says after 78 days,
okay, fine, I'll stop killing Kosovoire.
But the mechanism is important because nobody really knows why he stopped and he agreed to the terms.
But why does he quit doing what he, how does it work?
What are the coercion mechanisms when the Americans in the NATO are asking for so little,
stop killing people, for the leverage of air power to work against Lebanon,
and Milosevic.
But it still held up as this air power case that air power alone had a strategic effect.
Now, there was all kinds of other things going on.
The Russians finally said to Slobodan Milosevic, stop doing what you're doing.
And that probably had a big part to do with it.
The Americans and Clinton finally said, if you don't knock it off, we're going to put
American forces, especially into Kosovo to help the KLA, Kosovov Liberation Army to fight
against the Serb forces on the ground.
Yeah, there was the threat of ground troops as well, right?
Yeah.
And so there are other things.
But 1999 is held up as the ideal case for air power.
winning, quote unquote, winning a war in the sense of it is used to course political objectives
with air power alone. But there are, of course, other mechanisms and variables involved.
Hey folks, more strategic bombing coming up after this.
So even that one, we're notching up as a success with an asterisk, for sure.
Is there anywhere else that's provided subsequent evidence that has been used by air power
or proponents of strategic air power?
So you look at Russia and Ukraine right now.
Great air power story.
Interesting air power story.
The air power of the Russians is completely mismanaged, and they're getting airplanes
shot out of the sky and helicopters shot out of the sky on a regular basis.
The Ukrainians are using amazing technology with drones, UAVs, uncrewd aerial vehicles,
RPVs, remotely piloted vehicles, autonomy, AI, robots, etc.
And the spider web attack that they did where they trucked,
hundreds of drones across the border towards the Russian air base and they open up the back of
the truck and all these little tiny UAVs took off and basically destroyed this entire airbase.
Fascinating stuff with new technology.
And that air power story is still waiting to be written.
But it's going to be interesting to see how that plays out in the sense of Russia's completely
just, I don't know if they don't know what they're doing, but they're completely mismanaging
that whole situation and completely underestimated the Ukrainians willing.
to fight literally to the death. And this is a fascinating part of how coercion works in the sense
of whoever seemingly has the power has to be able to convince the other to do what they want.
And the Ukrainians are unwilling to bend to what Russians want. And now they have the
backing of Europe, basically, and most of NATO. And so that story is going to be ongoing
until literally Russia gives up and says this isn't worth it anymore.
And so that's why in the history of strategic air power, it has bombed things, it has killed people,
it has conducted raids of both astonishing sophistication and precision, but also of enormous mortality,
but it has never created a liberal democracy, for example, because that's not what air power does.
It can coerce, it can destroy, there still has to be an agent, a human on the ground making decisions, right,
about the future course of that country?
You're absolutely correct.
I won't even mince words.
You can't create a liberal democracy with the application of air power.
There has to be some sort of mechanism.
It's a great story of the difference between force and actually winning the hearts and minds.
And I hate that phrase, but you have to have people that are willing to accept a new form of government.
But is it, for example, the American's job or the Chinese job?
or the Russian's job to force those governmental changes on other countries.
And so you look at what Russia is doing in Ukraine right now.
You look at what Russia is doing in Chechchian right now.
You look at what Russia tried to do in Afghanistan in the 80s, 70s and 80s.
You look at what the United States is doing in the Middle East.
You look at what China is thinking about regarding Taiwan.
And Hong Kong, for that matter.
I mean, they're not even using air power.
They're just beating people up.
But the idea of applying force to have a political outcome that favors your democratic purposes
or governmental purposes is super awkward.
And I think it's a really interesting conversation piece.
Thanks, Mike.
I guess we can just finish up by saying in your survey of air power now stretching
just over 100 years, has air power alone ever brought about regime change and not just
regime change, but regime change, which in the eyes of historians, consensus, is that it was
a good thing, an improvement, something that was progressive. Yeah, Dan, I've been studying this
for a long time. There are events in history that we point to that are better, applications
of air power, better as a loaded term, are more clear applications of air power that are good
examples, but air power doesn't exist in a vacuum. And so, no, there isn't any one case of
air power where air power alone has been applied to create liberal democracy, period. There's
not even really a good example of where air power alone has been applied to create better
conditions for the populations that are affected. It can be incredibly, it has in the past been
very counterproductive. And I think we can point to a number of cases where that's obvious,
but it still will be a tool of governments who have that power who want to use force to try to
coerce. And at the end of the day, and this is an argument that I make, it ruffles a lot of feathers,
but air power in general, and this goes back to the 1920s with the RAF, is less expensive than
other options. Cyber might change that equation a little bit going into the future. Airplanes are
still super expensive and you look at how much Americans pay for their Air Force. It's still very,
very expensive, but less in money than, say, a division of boots on the ground or a capital ship,
an aircraft carrier, for example, that kind of thing, less than a Navy, less than an army. And air power,
because it offers the promise that your pilots can fly or even an uncrewed vehicle can fly over enemy
territory, drops and bombs, come back, and everybody's safe on your side, means that the politicians
like it a whole lot more because you're putting fewer in the case of what we're talking about
Americans in harm's way while you're still trying to have your tactical, operational,
and strategic effects. And so it becomes an easy way for politicians.
politicians or leaders, the White House in this case, to use air power in lieu of naval power
or army, boots on the ground power, Marines, special forces, etc., etc. And so even though you're
going to have casualties, you can potentially have strategic effects. So we go back to 1999 really
quick. No Americans die in combat operations over Kosovo. There are two helicopter pilots that get
killed in a training accident that's close but not there. There's a couple of airplanes that are
shot down. Sure. There's lots and lots of UAVs, drones that are shot down by the Serbs. No Americans
died. And yet we have that strategic influence and coercion on Slobodan-Losovich eventually after 78 days.
And so air power becomes an easy way to apply force without much cost, either in blood,
or treasure. I mean, it is expensive. Don't get me wrong. But it's less. It costs less and it's
easier. And so in my argument, I say air power will continue to be used and may be used when it
shouldn't be. And it becomes very, very dangerous, especially for people that really don't
understand global dynamics, international relations, and geopolitics, and what that effect will
have. This bombing of Iran is going to have enormous primary, secondary, secondary,
and tertiary effects that I don't think the United States is sought through.
Well, Mike, that was brilliant as always.
What is the next book?
Just in me the title.
It's called American Air Power, the History, Theory, and Art of Air Warfare.
Thanks so much, Mike.
Thanks for coming on the podcast.
My pleasure.
Anytime, you know that.
Well, folks, thank you very much for listening to this.
Just as this podcast went to print, the Iranians named a new supreme leader,
Mhtaba Khomeini, the son of the previous Supreme Leader.
leader. So we've got a father-to-son transition there. So that suggests we can say now that
massive overwhelming air power has not yet succeeded in changing the character of the regime.
Donald Trump, for example, is said to be unhappy with the choice of leaders. So a clear
indication that air power alone is not organizing the situation on the ground in a manner
desired by those wielding that air power. It may, give enough time, it may change that strategic
orientation, it may change personnel, it may change the Iranian system. Let us. Let us give enough time. It may change
the Iranian system. Let us see what the coming weeks bring. As ever history, it will be your
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