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The Maritime Services, the Allies and Shaping the Kill Web

            It was not simply a question of range and speed, but ease of maintenance.

            “The current plane is a great plane. If the follow-on platform was a jet aircraft tanking will be a lot easier. It
            will make maintenance a lot easier as well.”

            HAVOC Works the Electronic Warfare Payload in the Digital Battlespace

            2017-08-10 By Robbin Laird and Ed Timperlake

            During our recent visit to NAWDC, we had a chance to talk with the leadership of N-10 or HAVOC as it is
            known at NAWDC.

            N10:  The US Navy’s Airborne Electronic Attack Weapons School, call sign “HAVOC”, stood up in 2011 to
            execute the NAWDC mission as it pertains to Electronic Warfare and the EA-18G Growler.  HAVOC is comprised
            of highly qualified Growler Tactics Instructors, or GTIs, that form the “tactical engine” of the EA-18G community,
            developing the tactics that get the most out of EA-18G sensors and weapons.  HAVOC’s mission is also to train
            Growler Aircrew and Intelligence Officers on those tactics during the Growler Tactics Instructor Course.

            The Growler Tactics Instructor Course is a rigorous 12 week syllabus of academic, simulator, and live fly events
            that earn graduates the Growler Tactics Instructor designation – the highest level of EA-18G tactical qualification
            that is recognized across Naval Aviation.  The Growler brings the most advanced tactical Electronic Warfare
            capabilities to operational commanders creating a tactical advantage for friendly air, land, and maritime forces
            by delaying, degrading, denying, or deceiving enemy kill chains.

            https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnrsw/installations/nas_fallon/about/nawdc.html

            It is clear that the HAVOC leadership looks at their work as providing key tools for the current fight, including
            embedding Naval aircrews with ground maneuver elements in our current wars.

            However they are also significantly laying the foundation for the con-ops evolution of many the tactics and
            training for combat employment of high intensity non-kinetic payloads in the digital battlespace.

            Significantly in building to the future, they are working their “tron magic” across the joint and coalition force.

            During our visit we interviewed LT Scot “Chu-Hi” Chuda, LCDR Stephen “Choda” Skoda, LT Steven Sanchetta
            and LCDR “Sharkey” McCormick.

            The team has significant electronic warfare experience starting with Prowler and has worked with Growler for
            some time as well.

            The first point made by the team was that the Growler is mission dependent.

            They emphasized that their role varied by mission but they were seeing an expanded role for the non-kinetic
            capability.
            They are expanding beyond a classic Suppression of Enemy Air Defense or SEAD role to look at other ways
            to contribute to a broader mission set.

            One should look at Growler as providing a non-kinetic payload within the evolving digital battlefield because
            the non-kinetic payload business is itself expanding as threat change and technology evolves.
            “How we integrate will always depend on the different assets available and the different missions.”





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