F-22 Flight
Test Avionics Delivered
The Air Force on June 4 announced that Boeing has delivered the
first block of advanced flight test avionics for the F-22 to the
airplane's primary contractor, Lockheed Martin.
The package, Block 1.1, represents 80 percent of the final flight
test avionics hardware for the Raptor. It contains more than 900,000
lines of code-about half of all the software that will be delivered
to the F-22 during engineering and manufacturing development.
Block 1.1 will support "power on" requirements for aircraft
4004, the fourth F-22 model off the assembly line. "Power on"
means that the aircraft will be turned on with its integrated avionics
and subsystems in place. A follow-on package, Block 1.2, will support
4004 taxi and first-flight testing.
"Delivery of Block 1.1 represents a critical step that demonstrates
our ability to deliver the heart of the F-22's avionics on schedule
and ahead of need dates," said Gerry Freisthler, deputy director
of the F-22 program office. "Getting 4004 in the air will go
a long way to proving system maturity."
Test Squadron Redesigns F-22 Launcher
The 412th Test Squadron, Edwards AFB, Calif., in concert with other
members of the F-22 Combined Test Force, has completely redesigned
the Raptor's weapons launchers. The new launchers are easier to
service and will save the Air Force millions over the life of the
program.
"The original launcher failed to meet the requested weight
specifications and was not maintenance friendly," said Capt.
Don Supon, of the F-22 CTF.
The launchers are located in the weapons bay beneath the F-22.
The original model was a horizontal-type launcher that would swing
down and then launch the missile. The new version is a vertical-type
launcher, meaning missiles are pushed straight down out of the weapons
bay.
The new launchers weigh 300 pounds less. "With the weight
of the old launcher, it had to be installed using support equipment,"
said Supon. "The new launcher is light enough that two people
can lift it while a third person installs the attaching bolts."
The improved equipment also provides for safer separation of missiles
out of the main weapons bays.
Logistics testing of the type that led to this change will continue
in the F-22 test program for the next three years.
"Without logistics testing, we would be fielding aircraft
which might have simple-to-correct deficiencies," said MSgt.
Richard Fournier, 412th Logistics Group test manager. "If you
find deficiencies early, then you can fix them during testing and
then incorporate the changes into the production model prior to
going into full production."
Boeing's JSF Coming Together
On June 13, Boeing announced that it had successfully attached
the single-piece wing for the Joint Strike Fighter X-32 concept
demonstrator to its fuselage. A small team of mechanics positioned
and mated all the attach points between the wing and fuselage within
six hours, company officials said.
"The X-32 is meeting its weight targets, meeting its schedule
targets, and meeting its cost targets," said Frank Statkus,
Boeing vice president and JSF general manager. "Overall fabrication
and assembly costs, for example, remain at 30 to 40 percent below
projections."
The wing is a single-piece, over-the-fuselage structure. It has
one-piece upper and lower composite skins and reduces weight by
eliminating heavy wing attachments at the sides of the fuselage.
During assembly, laser tracker devices on the factory floor use
3-D design data to move parts into place for nearly tool-less work.
"Innovative techniques are helping Boeing reduce tooling costs
by 60 to 70 percent over requirements for other developmental products
we have built, such as the YF-22," said Tim Opitz, assembly
team leader and program manufacturing manager.
Meanwhile, Boeing has expanded its JSF team, adding 25 subcontractors,
including eight firms in Canada, Denmark, Netherlands, and UK, to
its original complement of six. Those added include Aerosystems
of Yeovil, UK, which will provide logistics support; Fokker, of
the Netherlands (airframe structural details and wire bundles);
Hexcel, Kirkland, Wash. (composite raw materials); and Terma, Grenaa,
Denmark (airframe structural parts).
|
About the "Powell Doctrine"
...
Politicians, news analysts, and others have
gone to some length in explaining what Operation Allied Force
in the Balkans proved about the so-called "Powell Doctrine."
Rowan Scarborough of the Washington Times
said, "The 'Powell Doctrine' became the Pentagon's biggest
war casualty. Named after Gen. Colin Powell, the former Joint
Chiefs Chairman, the 1980s rule said American troops would
never again enter battle without decisive force and clear
objectives. In other words, no more Vietnams."
Mortimer B. Zuckerman of US News & World
Report wrote that Kosovo was a vindication of "the doctrine
of limited power for limited ends. The Powell Doctrine ...
was right in the Gulf [War] but wrong here: Incremental escalation
of precision guided munitions worked when used long enough."
In fact, the Powell Doctrine was actually
the Weinberger Doctrine, and the experience in Kosovo may
not have done it as much damage as some of the recent interpretations
suggest.
Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger made
major headlines when he presented the concept in a speech
at the National Press Club Nov. 28, 1984. The Washington Post
dubbed it the Weinberger Doctrine. He spoke against the backdrop
of not only Vietnam but also the deaths of 241 American servicemen,
most of them Marines, killed when a truck bomb blew up their
barracks in Beirut in 1983. The Marines, not configured or
equipped for combat, were in Lebanon on a fuzzily defined
peacekeeping mission as what the State Department called an
"interpositional force."
Weinberger said that six tests should be met
before US forces are committed to combat abroad. Is a vital
US interest at stake? Will we commit sufficient resources
to win? Are the objectives clearly defined? Will we sustain
the commitment? Is there reasonable expectation that the public
and Congress will support the operation? Have we exhausted
our other options?
The Gulf War of 1991 met these criteria-in
contrast to Vietnam, the Marine disaster in Lebanon, and the
use of lethal military force in a series of loosely defined
and tentatively prosecuted military actions to come during
the Clinton Administration.
In 1984 Powell was Weinberger's military assistant.
In his biography, My American Journey (Random House, 1995),
Powell says he first saw the concept when Weinberger asked
him to take a look at a draft document listing the six tests.
"Weinberger had applied his formidable lawyerly intellect
to an analysis of when and when not to commit United States
military forces abroad," Powell said. Powell became further
identified with the Weinberger Doctrine because he was Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Gulf War.
Its transformation into the Powell Doctrine,
however, happened in the run-up to the 1996 Presidential election.
Powell's right wing opponents, seeking to block his nomination
as a Republican candidate, misconstrued the Weinberger Doctrine
as a weakness and timidity, relabeled it, and then used it
as an instrument in a "Stop Powell Movement."
Writing in the New York Times April 12, 1999,
Weinberger said the Kosovo operation, then in its third week,
met the guidelines of the doctrine "to some extent,"
in that "the principal feature of my thinking was that
the United States should enter a conflict only if it was vital
to our national interest. That is the case here. The Balkans
have been at the heart of two world wars in this century,
so stability of the region is important." He added that:
"As a NATO member, the United States cannot ignore an
assault in Europe against all our values by a thug who has
directed brutal atrocities in Kosovo and Bosnia." However,
he said, the objective in Kosovo had to be victory and that
the United States and NATO had to be willing to apply sufficient
force to win.
Operation Allied Force began in the classic
mold of previous "Limited Force" actions of the
1990s. It opened in March with attacks on a handful of targets
and obvious indecision about objectives. The incrementalism
and gradualism of the operation were a throwback to the strategies
of Vietnam.
"By the time of NATO's summit in Washington-almost
a month into the air campaign-it became apparent to NATO that
a constrained, phased approach was not effective," Gen.
Michael E. Ryan, Air Force Chief of Staff, said in a newspaper
column June 4. "At the insistence of US leaders, NATO
widened the air campaign to produce the strategic effects
in Serbia proper." The operation finally began moving
with determination. The Serbian agreement to NATO's terms
then followed in early June.
-John T. Correll
|
ABL Laser Module Powers Up
On June 10, the Airborne Laser program's flight-weight laser module
reached 107 percent of peak power in a test. The power level reached
is 30 to 40 percent greater than that required to shoot down a missile
target, officials said.
The test was held at TRW's San Juan Capistrano, Calif., facilities.
TRW is developing the ABL's chemical oxygeniodine laser and
subsystems, while Lockheed Martin is developing the beam control
system and Boeing is working on the battle management system and
outfitting a 747 as an ABL platform.
"You never want to be overconfident, but we think the technology
is proving itself," Maj. Gen. Bruce A. Carlson, Air Force director
of operational requirements, said at a Washington breakfast June
11.
ABL is unlikely to run into the test problems that have plagued
the Theater High Altitude Area Defense program, said Carlson. The
program plans extensive mitigation tests before an actual flight
test.
"We will have fired the laser at full power with full tracking
system at least 34 times before we shoot down a [target],"
said Carlson. He added that the ABL would boost the capability of
other missile defense systems, including THAAD.
Defense Bills Advance
An amendment attached to the Senate defense appropriations bill
for FY 2000 just before final floor action would force the Air Force
to buy four new F-15E fighters at the expense of spare parts budgets
and other O&M accounts.
The provision was sponsored by Missouri and Illinois lawmakers
whose constituents would be affected by a shutdown of Boeing's St.
Louis F-15 production line. It was inserted at the 11th hour during
floor debate on the legislation June 8 and passed by voice vote.
About $70 million of the $220 million needed to purchase the aircraft
would come from the Air Force's aircraft spares and repair parts
budget, reducing this crucial area of funding by about 16 percent.
Another $50 million would come from the Navy spares and repair budget.
Guard and Reserve spares and national missile defense budgets would
yield the remainder of the funds.
Other amendments attached to the Senate appropriations measure
include one that would fence off $63 million in Air Force research
and development funds for C-5 modernization and another that would
provide $4 million for supersonic aircraft noise mitigation R&D.
Senate floor action on the FY 2000 defense authorization bill also
produced some last minute changes, though none had such profound
funding implications as the appropriations changes.
One amendment calls for the Secretary of Defense to ensure that
budget plans contain enough money for advanced Ballistic Missile
Defense technology development, as well as major BMD acquisition
programs. Another directs the Air Force to study its options for
meeting mission requirements once its current inventory of Conventional
Air Launched Cruise Missiles is exhausted.
The CALCM study, due Jan. 15, 2000, is supposed to weigh the virtues
of restarting that CALCM production line, buying an all-new type
of weapon, or using current munitions with upgrades.
Congress and Tricare
Tricare reform would get a boost under an amendment attached to
the House Fiscal 2000 defense authorization act during final floor
action June 10.
The plan--drafted by Rep. Mac Thornberry (R-Texas)--requires the
Secretary of Defense to report on the best way to make sure Tricare
benefits are portable from region to region. It would also permit
third-party payers to reimburse military treatment facilities at
Medicare rates or better for treatment provided to their clients.
The amendment also aims to cut red tape by allowing for electronic
filing and by requiring that best business practices be implemented
on awarded contracts.
Global Hawk Back in Skies
On June 3, Air Force officials announced that Global Hawk Unmanned
Aerial Vehicle No. 1 resumed flight testing in mid-May, following
reinstatement of its flight certification by a safety review board.
The aircraft had been grounded since the March 29 crash of Global
Hawk No. 2.
The Air Force investigation into the cause of the March crash is
continuing.
"It's good to get back in the air again, after having not
flown in a month and a half," said Lt. Col. Pat Bolibrzuch,
Global Hawk program manager at Aeronautical Systems Center, Wright-Patterson
AFB, Ohio. "This was a short sortie [7.8 hours] in which we
wanted to check out the basic aircraft subsystems before the integration
of synthetic aperture radar into the aircraft later this month."
The next year or so promises to be a busy one for the remaining
UAV airframe. It is supposed to participate in 13 joint exercises
through June of 2000 to assess its potential use for US military
forces.
A developmental flight vehicle under the Advanced Concept Technology
Demonstration Program, Global Hawk is intended to provide commanders
high-altitude, long-endurance reconnaissance imagery in near real
time.
THAAD Finally Hits Target
On June 10, the Theater High Altitude Area Defense missile did
something it had never done before--it successfully intercepted
a target missile.
This achievement came on the heels of six successive THAAD test
failures. The last, in March, cost Lockheed Martin $15 million in
penalty fees. The company was on notice to make two successful target
intercepts by mid-July or face another $20 million in failure payments.
Failure to make three successful hits by mid-October leads to additional
penalties, for a total of up to $75 million by the end of 1999.
The successful test came at 5:19 a.m. over the central portion
of White Sands Missile Range, N.M. The Hera target simulated an
incoming Scud ballistic missile. It was destroyed on impact.
Proponents said the successful test demonstrated that the hit-to-kill
concept underlying THAAD is the correct way to approach defense
against ballistic missiles. But the system still has doubters within
the Pentagon. Hans Mark, Defense Department director of defense
research and engineering, recently sent new Ballistic Missile Defense
Organization head Lt. Gen. Ronald T. Kadish a letter warning that
THAAD may never work as well as its designers hope and that perhaps
the requirements for the system should be eased.
Work Starts on Air Force Osprey
On June 7, an MV-22 Marine Corps Osprey arrived at Bell Helicopter
Textron's Arlington, Texas, plant. When it leaves sometime next
year it will be the first CV-22-the Air Force version of the new
tilt-rotor craft.
"They're basically going to strip it down and rebuild it to
the CV-22 specifications," said Maj. Scott LeMay, Aeronautical
System Center's CV-22 deputy program manager. "It's going to
have CV-22 production wiring and all CV-22 unique systems."
The Air Force plans to eventually buy 50 CV-22s to replace its
fleet of MH-53J Pave Low helicopters. The aircraft's mission will
be to deliver and retrieve special forces units from hostile areas.
The Air Force Osprey model will have integrated radio frequency
countermeasures, including an active jammer. It will also have terrain
following/terrain avoidance radar, an additional 900 gallons of
fuel capacity, rope ladders, a survivor locator system, and additional
radios and upgraded computers.
The first CV-22 is currently scheduled to begin an initial operational
test and evaluation at Kirtland AFB, N.M., in spring 2002.
"We'll put it through its paces by basically doing a mock
deployment," said LeMay. "This is to make sure that it
meets what's required in the operational requirements document and
that it is operationally effective and suitable."
CV-22 procurement is scheduled to begin in 2001, with first deliveries
in 2003.
Tinker B-2 Experts Keep Stealth in
the Air
A major problem was threatening to damage the B-2's mission effectiveness
during Operation Allied Force-until the System Engineering Branch
of the B-2 System Program Management Division stepped in.
The glitch was the Actuator Remote Terminal, which works the various
control surfaces on the airplane. Because of an airflow-cooling
problem, the ART was a high-failure item on the bat-winged bomber.
The ART is so sensitive that it has to be set down on a solid granite
surface for repairs, to ensure leveling.
Things reached a critical point when a shortage of ART supplies
threatened to cause combat mission aborts. The Tinker AFB, Okla.-based
System Engineering Branch stepped in and found that the vendor for
the part had a limited capacity for repair.
"He was meeting a 23- to 24-day turnaround in some instances,
but with the increased flying schedule, he was unable to surge his
capacity to the point that he could take care of requirements,"
said Bob Cotton, avionics armament team lead for Oklahoma City B-2
System Program Office.
Cotton and others worked up repair procedures. A team of engineers
traveled from Tinker to Whiteman AFB, Mo., to provide on-the-spot
training. They worked a tight schedule around the B-2's continuing
bombing mission to implement their solution.
Space Launch Chief Muses About Big
Changes in Business
As yet investigators have found no common cause in the spate of
recent launch vehicle accidents which have endangered US access
to space. But the six launch failures may mean that the US needs
to rethink its entire process for hurling payloads aloft, Air Force
ICBM and Space Launch Division chief Col. James Puhek said June
9.
The legacy systems in use today--Atlas, Titan, and Delta rockets--all
have their roots in 1960s technology, noted Puhek. Yet missions
are different today, and program oversight is less, due to budget
restrictions.
"Maybe we've gone a bit too far as a nation by treating space
access as routine and fully operational with systems not designed
to meet today's higher standards," said Puhek. "I don't
know the answer, but we're finally looking at such possibilities
now, as we should."
Three of the six launch failures were run by the government, and
three by private industry. Initial indications were that each was
the result of a different problem. A number of overlapping investigations
are now probing US launch problems. The Air Force and NASA are both
conducting separate reviews, which in turn will feed into a broad
government-wide investigation ordered by President Clinton on May
19.
In addition, Boeing has assembled a group of experts to review
its processes and procedures in the wake of failures of its Delta
III and Inertial Upper Stage. Former Air Force Secretary Sheila
E. Widnall will head the effort.
"Because the six incidents were so close in time, it has caused
us to scope up and take a bigger look into the whole picture,"
Puhek said. "Lockheed Martin and Boeing have also started their
own investigations, so you've got a lot of people working on the
problem at the same time."
With some 25 launches scheduled for Fiscal 2000, answers need to
be found quickly if changes are to be made to ensure US access to
space.
NASA has already delayed three satellite launches, pending investigations
into failures of Lockheed Martin's Centaur upper stage. Affected
payloads are a Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite
(GOES-L), a Tracking and Data Relay Satellite (TDRS), and an Earth
Observing System (EOS) Am-1.
Lockheed Martin C-130J Claims 50
World Records
On June 13, Lockheed Martin officials announced that a company
flight crew piloting an unmodified C-130J Hercules transport had
claimed 50 new world aeronautical records.
Four C-130J flights over two days broke 16 existing world marks
and established standards in 34 other categories where no previous
sanctioned attempts have been made, firm officials said.
"These records are simply a reflection of the capability of
the C- 130J," said company pilot Arlen Rens.
Twenty-one of the records were set in the Class C-1.N, Turboprop
category for speed over a 1,000- and 2,000-kilometer closed course
and for altitude with payload. The airplane's 1,000 km speed of
396.17 mph, for instance, broke the previous mark-set by a Soviet
crew flying an Antonov An-12 in 1991-by 8 percent.
The other 29 records were set in the short takeoff and landing,
Class N, Turboprop category for similar speed and payload accomplishment,
as well as time-to-climb achievement.
The aircraft reached 3,000 meters in 3 minutes, 49 seconds, while
carrying a 10,000 kilogram payload, for instance.
"We didn't just set records for the sake of setting records,"
said Lyle Schaefer, who served as pilot in command for some of the
flights. "We took a payload that represents a militarily usable
cargo, flew a distance that is a realistic representation of a typical
military mission, and we did it at high speed."
ACC Pursues Mustard Agent
Air Combat Command wants to find and clean up sites where chemical
warfare materials may have been disposed on ACC facilities.
The search is focusing on chemical agent identification sets. These
kits, which contain four-ounce vials of actual mustard agent, were
used for training from the 1920s to the 1960s. Officials decided
the search was necessary after some discarded sets were found during
routine environmental cleanup at Ellsworth AFB, S.D., in August
1997.
The Army destroyed about 21,000 of the sets in the early 1980s,
and Air Force officials believe most of the rest were used up during
training. But the Ellsworth discovery alerted them to the fact that
some may have been buried, which was an acceptable disposal method
for many years.
"There isn't an immediate danger to the base or surrounding
communities," said Norm Guenther, the ACC program manager.
"The potential for a problem exists primarily during construction
activities when digging is taking place."
The search effort, named the Chemical Agent Records Search Initiative,
has already turned up records suggesting that the training kits
were used at most ACC bases. But the records did not identify any
specific disposal sites.
CARSI is now looking at more specific base and regional documents
and conducting confidential interviews with current and former Air
Force employees. Officials have completed and distributed a chemical
warfare materiel handbook to make sure anyone who turns up the vials
will know what to do.
"Part of this initiative is also to make sure our people know
how to respond, should they encounter a problem unexpectedly,"
said Guenther.
Anyone with pertinent information should contact chemical agent
identification sets contractor Mitretek toll free at 1-877-237-8789
or send an e-mail to afsurvey@mitretek.org.
SA Area Gets More F-16 Pilot Training
The military-dependent San Antonio economy has been battered in
recent years by base closures and the military drawdown. Now it
is seeing a glimmer of good news, with the conversion of the Texas
Air National Guard's 149th Fighter Wing from general-purpose unit
to a flying training wing.
The change has created 80 full-time jobs within the unit for instructor
pilots and support staff. It will also require construction of classroom
buildings and the hiring of academic instructors.
Implemented in January, the mission switch is meant to train Air
National Guard aviators in an effort to help ease the backlog of
flight school students waiting to become full-fledged F-16 fighter
pilots.
Attrition has been the main culprit creating the logjam, said wing
commander Col. Robert J. Spermo. Airlines are taking some of Air
Force's best pilots, notably instructor pilots. That leaves the
service in the difficult position of trying to maintain its instructor
force in the face of real-world deployments and a steady stream
of student pilots waiting for flight training.
In Fiscal 1999, for instance, the National Guard requested 51 slots
at the Air Force F-16 training school. It got only nine.
"That leaves 42 students coming out of pilot training and
returning to their units without being able to perform the actual
mission they signed up for," Spermo said.
Some unit pilots are not overjoyed about the change, which takes
away their traditional warfighting role.
"Your average fighter pilot was really not that happy at first,"
said Maj. Jack Presley, operations officer for the wing's 182nd
Fighter Squadron. "It's not that teaching is a bad duty assignment.
It's just that the pilots are no longer frontline fighter pilots."
Others recognize that the change does have benefits.
"This will at least give us a chance to leave a mark,"
said Presley. "This can be very rewarding for all of us."
Allied Force Units Produce Big Numbers
On June 10, the 78th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron passed an amazing
combat milestone-1,000 sorties in support of Operation Allied Force.
The unit reached that level only 53 days after the first "Bushmasters"
sortie was launched in theater. When weather, higher headquarter's
cancellations, and other scrubs are added into the picture, the
78th was prepared to launch 1,300 combat flights during the conflict.
"The folks out here [on the flight line]--my hat's off to
them," said Lt. Col. Clyde Bellinger, the F-16CJ pilot who
landed the historic flight. "They deserve this honor. I just
happened to drive the bus, so to speak."
Maintainers generated an average 20 to 24 F-16CJ sorties every
day.
"I think [when you look at] the big picture, it's a total
team effort-all the technicians, weapons load crews, crew chiefs,
and support staff have done a tremendous job," said Maj. James
Ayers, squadron maintenance officer.
Meanwhile, the 92nd Air Expeditionary Wing can boast that its personnel
had pumped more than 47 million gallons of fuel to support Allied
combat sorties.
One airman in particular had been a workhorse, said Col. Vern M.
"Rusty" Findley II, 92nd AEW commander. A1C Mike Rafa
had single-handedly pumped more than 3.7 million gallons since Feb.
20.
"He's a hero with a capital 'H'," said Findley.
Stop-Loss Nears End
On June 22, Air Force officials announced the start of a phased
termination of the Stop-Loss program. That means some 4,569 airmen
in 85 career fields deemed critical to Operation Allied Force were
able to resume planning for their post-service lives.
The announcement came two days after NATO Secretary General Javier
Solana proclaimed that the Alliance's bombing campaign against Yugoslavia
was officially over.
"With the end of hostilities, withdrawal of Yugoslav troops
from Kosovo, and the redeployment of our forces home, it is appropriate
to begin releasing our people from Stop-Loss," said Col. Lynn
Pratt, chief of the Air Force's Military Personnel Policy Division.
The program did not end all at once, said Pratt. Both the Air Force
and affected airmen needed some time and flexibility as they resumed
peacetime operations.
Stop-Loss was over for affected personnel who were not deployed
in the effort to halt ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, USAF officials
said. For those who were deployed, Stop-Loss terminates when they
return to their home station. Stop-Loss for Air Force reservists
ended June 22.
The Air Force announced its decision to implement the program May
26. However, it was not to take effect until June 15, which turned
out to be five days after NATO suspended its airstrikes.
For many it was not an absolute bar from leaving the service-the
Air Force Personnel Center approved at least 129 waivers for lieutenant
colonels and lower ranks, allowing them to retire or separate from
active duty on their approved dates.
Air Force Units Wing Back From
Europe
Air Force aircraft quickly flooded back to home bases in the weeks
following the official end of Operation Allied Force, the NATO bombing
campaign against Yugoslavia.
Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen authorized two increments
of redeployment in late June. On June 21, 124 aircraft were released
to return from bases in Europe to the continental United States.
Among those affected were 12 F-117s, which flew from Spangdahlem
AB, Germany, to Holloman AFB, N.M., and six B-1 bombers, which returned
from RAF Fairford, UK, to Ellsworth AFB, S.D.
On June 25, Cohen allowed a further 221 aircraft to return to the
US and 60 to return to European home bases. These included 24 F-16CJs
which flew from Aviano AB, Italy, to Shaw AFB, S.C., and 18 F-15Cs,
which moved from Cervia AB, Italy, to RAF Lakenheath, UK.
Meanwhile, President Clinton visited Whiteman AFB, Mo., to thank
the crews of the 509th Bomb Wing for participating from the heartland
of America in the conflict-something no other unit has ever done.
The 509th's B-2 Spirit bombers flew less than 1 percent of Operation
Allied Force missions but dropped 11 percent of the bomb load.
"The pilots, the crews, ... and everyone who is part of the
B-2 team stationed at Whiteman should take special pride in proving
what a truly remarkable aircraft can do," said Clinton. "As
far as we know, they still don't know you were there."
Allied Aircraft Continue to Pound
Iraq
Iraq has kept firing at US and coalition aircraft that are enforcing
no-fly zones over its territory-and the aircraft kept responding
by pounding Iraqi military sites.
On June 24, for instance, Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery fire targeted
US and British aircraft patrolling over the south of the country.
In response, coalition forces struck four military communications
sites about 170 miles southeast of Baghdad near Ash Shatrah and
a surface-to-air missile site in the vicinity of Kut Al Hayy, 100
miles southeast of Baghdad.
On June 21 and 22, aircraft patrolling both Iraq's northern and
southern no-fly zones came under attack. Responding in self-defense,
US Air Force fighters from Operation Northern Watch dropped precision
guided munitions on a military command-and-control site southwest
of Mosul. Navy aircraft patrolling the southern zone hit two surface-to-air
missile sites near As Samawah.
The clashes represented something of a low-level, continuing conflict.
Coalition and Iraqi forces have exchanged fire more than 190 times
since the end of Operation Desert Fox in December.
Helo, Fighter Crashes Claim Lives
An MH-53J Pave Low helicopter from the 20th Special Operations
Squadron, Hurlburt Field, Fla., crashed June 2 near Fayetteville,
N.C., while on a routine training mission. One of the six crew members
died the next day.
SSgt. Kurt Upton, of Niota, Ill., who was a gunner on the MH-53J
and had served in the Air Force for seven years, died June 3 at
the Ft. Bragg Medical Center in North Carolina from injuries he
received during the crash. The other five were released from the
hospital.
On July 1, a pilot with Air Force Reserve Command's 93rd Fighter
Squadron, Homestead ARB, Fla., was killed when his F-16 crashed
in a remote area near Avon Park Bombing Range in central Florida.
Maj. Samuel D'Angelo III, an American Airlines pilot and resident
of Key Largo, Fla., was on a low-level training mission as part
of a four-ship formation. The 19-year military veteran had recently
returned from helping enforce the no-fly zone over northern Iraq.
Boards of officers are investigating each accident.
Y2K Problems? Call Air Force Fusion
Center
The Air Force's Standard Systems Group is setting up a central
help point for collection, consolidation, and reporting of the inevitable
computer problems the service will encounter at the turn of the
year 2000.
The help team will consist of a cross-functional group of SSG experts,
bolstered by computer specialists from around the Air Force and
a network of service help desks. The centralized Y2K Fusion Center
is supposed to be up and running at Maxwell AFB, Ala., by Sept.
1.
The center will be equipped with a variety of specialized and secure-but
unclassified-communications systems, including secret Internet protocol
router networks and secure fax and video teleconference lines.
Personnel with potential Y2K problems should first go to the help
desk that normally supports their particular system, said Kenneth
Heitkamp, SSG technical director. That desk will solve the problem,
if it can, and report anomalies to the Fusion Center.
"No Department of Defense caller will be turned away,"
said Col. Robert Glitz, chief of SSG's Software Factory customer
support division. "We have people working now with all other
appropriate agencies so we'll know exactly who is responsible for
what. So if a customer has a problem and doesn't know who the point
of contact is, they can call the Fusion Center and get the name
and number of the agency that can help."
Callers can reach the Fusion Center at toll free
877-596-5771; or 334-416-5771; DSN 596-5771.
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Senators: Ground Forces
Need More
The Senate Armed Services Committee at a June
8 hearing heard from Gen. Eric K. Shinseki of the Army and
Lt. Gen. James L. Jones Jr. of the Marine Corps. The hearing's
declared purpose was to confirm appointments of the two to
serve as heads of their services. With the chairman, Sen.
John W. Warner (RVa.), in the lead, discussion veered
to Kosovo and the relative importance of airpower and land
power-in particular, the need to fund a bigger land force.
Joining in were Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman (DConn.) and
Sen. Pat Roberts (RKan.).
Here are some excerpts:
Warner: I'd like to have your views, and particularly
whether or not, after you're in office for a period of time,
that you would feel it would be necessary to petition the
President and the Secretary of Defense to raise the overall
force levels of your respective branches to meet what I perceive
as an increasing worldwide threat to US forces and to those
of our allies from an ever growing situation resulting from
weapons of mass destruction and other threats, terrorism,
and indeed the need-and it is essential-for the United States
to participate in peacekeeping operations, ... which is really
something that's somewhat new in the past decade for the armed
forces of the United States. ...
Shinseki: The Army is structured, resourced,
and equipped and trains with a focus on executing [a] two-Major-Theater-War
scenario. We are currently capable of meeting that strategy
requirement, but I would tell you that the Army's ability
to handle that second MTW is one that would be done at high
risk. ... In terms of force levels, ... end strength, I think
that is a legitimate concern. The Army's in the midst right
now of a top to bottom scrub, a total Army analysis process
that is looking at just that very question. ... It would be
a bit premature for me to tell you that raising the end strength
right now is the right call, but I think it is a legitimate
concern. ...
Warner: Do you think that at some point in
time [it] is a valid requirement to go and look at the end
strength in terms of possibly raising it?
Jones: I do, sir.
Warner: This has been a most unusual conflict.
... It has been basically an air-only campaign. ... Now your
two services ... are both recognized for tremendous sacrifice
of life and limb in previous conflicts. There could be a call
for a shift to more emphasis, in terms of our resources, ...
towards heavier and heavier [use of] air and less and less
emphasis on the component which I believe remains essential
and always will be-ground forces. ... We should prepare the
public to recognize that this was an exceptional conflict,
and it does not diminish the need for us to have a total force
including significant ground forces. ... A short answer from
both of you.
Shinseki: I think we need to keep perspective
here on the reason why you have an Army, and that is to fight
and win our nation's wars. And to the degree that we do that
well, we do that with our cohorts in the Air Force, Navy,
and Marine Corps. But resolution of conflict eventually goes
to a land battle and I think keeping a trained and ready and
strong Army is very much a part of that equation. ...
Jones: I totally agree with General Shinseki.
The utility of ground forces is beyond question. ... It's
the ultimate employment of our national will, but it's something
that must be carefully considered. You have to have the capability
and we should do everything to preserve it and enhance it.
Lieberman: [O]ne of the policy questions that
people are going to be thinking about ... is whether, in fact,
we can achieve objectives on the ground from the air. Now,
I'm highly skeptical of that, but one of the advantages, one
of the reasons we did it this way, and one of the advantages
was that we had ... no casualties, no American casualties.
And this was as a result of the enormous leveraging of technology.
...
Shinseki: Can you do it all from the air?
I [take] great comfort in the quality of our Air Force, and
I wouldn't have it any other way. ... I think Jim and I would
both say ... I don't think we've ever been ... on a crowded
battlefield. There has always been a requirement for a joint
commitment to bringing decisive conclusion to any conflict
I've seen or been a part of. And so, can we do it all from
the air, I think, is a question that, I would say, no-not
because I'm a ground guy but because I think we bring decisive
closure to contests when we bring all of our capabilities
to bear, and that's ground, air, and naval.
Jones: I would just only add that I think
that it's not out of the realm of distinct possibility that
the current state of negotiations has something to do with
the fact that for weeks now there has been [talk of] possible
ground operations. I think the presence of the Army brigade
task force and its preparations have not been unnoticed on
the Serbian forces. ... And also the presence of the US Army
on the ground, the Apaches and the like, had a very strong
effect. ... I think the observed naval demonstrations with
the proximity of the Marine Expeditionary Unit off the coast
of Greece obviously sends a message. I think the presence
of the maritime pre-positioned squadrons that are nearby also
sends a message of intent. So, I believe that the ground forces
did in fact have some contribution in bringing about the current
state of negotiations. ...
Warner: I am certain that message got through
to Milosevic, that the supreme allied commander of Europe
... was prepared to lead those forces and to put in place
such other forces as he deemed necessary.
Roberts: The two leaders of the most powerful
ground forces in the world are here at the same time to seek
confirmation to lead their services into the 21st century.
[It is] ironic in the sense that we are apparently are ending
a conflict where the ground forces were only reluctantly considered,
if they were seriously considered at all. And the United States
and the NATO Alliance relied solely on airpower to seek a
military solution to a problem. I sincerely hope that we as
a nation have not learned the wrong lesson from this air campaign.
... I think there is always a vital role for the Marines and
the Army. |
Total Force Big at USTRANSCOM
The Total Force is a fact of life for everyone in the US military--but
it is perhaps uniquely important to US Transportation Command and
Air Mobility Command, according to TRANSCOM chief Gen. Charles T.
"Tony" Robertson Jr.
"In every mode of transportation at least half of our capacity
comes from our commercial partners [in the Civil Reserve Air Fleet],"
Robertson said at a recent Air Force Association symposium in St.
Louis.
On the military side, a majority of the command's airlift capability
rests with the Guard and Reserve.
"Our dependence on the Total Force ensures the taxpayer only
pays for the additional capability when our nation needs it, during
times of war or other major conflict," said the TRANSCOM commander
in chief.
CRAF saved the US more than $3 billion during the Gulf War, for
instance.
"During Desert Storm, we activated 117 aircraft from CRAF
which flew 20 percent of the total strategic airlift missions,"
said Robertson. "The cost was $1.35 billion vs. maintaining
a military fleet [at a cost of] $4 [billion] to $5 billion ... great
bargain."
Peters Confident of Access to
Space
During a late June visit to Schriever AFB, Colo., acting Secretary
of the Air Force F. Whitten Peters said he is confident that there
are no major problems with the hardware design of the nation's space
launch vehicles, despite a recent string of expensive launch disasters.
Among other investigative efforts, an Air Force broad area review
is now studying the failures to see if the service needs to change
practice, procedures, or operations to ensure US military access
to space.
"Right now, I don't see a systematic problem with our launch
capability. Everything looks like separate and distinct problem[s],"
Peters told Air Force Space Command's 11th Space Warning Squadron.
"The real questions that seem to be coming up are: Have we
lost an important experience base, and have we stopped doing some
procedures that we once did that would protect us from this?"
There has been a brain drain on both the military and civil space
industry, pointed out Peters. There have been retirements and consolidations
in both sectors since the military drawdown began in the late 1980s.
"So at least one theory is that we've had a tremendous loss
of corporate knowledge," he said. "If this assumption
is true, then we need to go back and assess our processes and make
sure we meet the standards."
The Air Force's move from direct oversight of quality to insight
in the contractors' quality control practices has been a point of
concern, Peters acknowleged.
"All insight does is put on the Air Force's shoulder the burden
to look at the overall quality procedures, rather than do the quality
tests ourselves," he said. "We look to make sure the basic
safeguards are in place for the contractor. I still think that is
the right way to go. However, the fundamental question is, do we
have the right quality procedures today, given the work force today,
to assure launch?"
The acting Air Force chief also talked about the need to upgrade
the Air Force's two ranges. Both the Eastern Range at Patrick AFB,
Fla., and the Western Range at Vandenberg AFB, Calif., are in need
of major modernization.
"We have range modernization programs in place, but there's
a historically very high risk that they will slip," said Peters,
"not because the programs are at fault but because we keep
taking the money for more high priority problems."
Rally '99 Tests Airlift Ops
Flames race across dry fields toward the isolated city. As they
speed onward, an international airlift task force races against
time, landing supplies and people needed to protect the outpost
from the flames.
That was the scenario faced by aircrews that took part in Pacific
Airlift Rally '99, held at Royal Australian Air Force Base, Darwin,
Australia, on June 14 to 18.
The every-other-year rally was meant to test international airlift
operations for humanitarian and disaster relief. This year's event
included participants from Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Caledonia,
Mongolia, Thailand, Papua New Guinea, Australia, and the US.
The US team included a C-130 from Yokota AB, Japan, and a C-130
from the Hawaii Air National Guard, Hickam AFB, Hawaii, along with
their support personnel.
"The scenario revolved around a bush fire in the gulf country
at Normanton in Queensland," said Tony Griffiths, operations
officer for the New South Wales Rural Fire Service. "That's
a relatively remote area with a small town with a small port nearby.
It very quickly built into a situation where the local resources
weren't capable of dealing with it."
Rally participants tried to commit about 30 additional fire tankers
and 250 firefighters to control the fire in three or four days.
Weather--at least in the scenario-got progressively worse.
"It was pretty interesting because we had to be able to interpret
what the airlifters' requirements were, as in numbers of flights
and what they could fit on particular aircraft with limitations
due to weather," said Griffiths.
Participants split into two groups. One worked on turning around
flights at two small airfields that could only accommodate one airplane
at a time.
"It was challenging in that you got to work with multiple
countries to see how they do things," said Capt. Andy McIntyre
of the 36th Airlift Squadron. "Your basic airlift is the same,
but some of the little nuances like crew duty day would come out
and you had to work around that a little bit. You also had to work
with the different airlift capabilities of the different platforms."
A second group worked on the logistics of what should and could
go on each flight.
"The fact that we could only land one airplane at a time per
airfield, on two different airfields, was just a logistical nightmare,"
said SSgt. Robert McLean, from Yokota's 374th Airlift Wing.
In addition to command post interaction, US crews got valuable
experience flying on missions with foreign units.
JEFX '99 Starts in August
Despite the increased operations tempo caused by war in the Balkans,
the two-week Joint Expeditionary Force Experiment '99 was scheduled
to begin in August at locations nationwide.
The exercise aims to improve tactical or wing level command-and-control
procedures using two Air Expeditionary Forces as the basis of the
experiment. It entails joint and coalition force participation and
integration of space capabilities into operations center activities.
"We've minimized the impact of real-world operations tempo,
have kept the experiment on track, and the objectives and initiatives
intact," said Col. Stephen Carr, vice commander of the Aerospace
Command and Control Training and Innovation Group at Hurlburt Field,
Fla. "From our perspective, we have a clear way ahead at this
point for a successful experiment."
That does not mean that problems in Kosovo did not affect event
planning. Changes had to be made to the experiment schedule because
of competing demands on Air Force people and equipment. Communications
equipment and manning were the biggest challenges.
"Our communications people had to go out and purchase additional
communications equipment that was not available to us because of
the [Kosovo] deployments," said Carr.
Planners had scheduled a fully manned aerospace operations center
but could count on only a minimal number of operators for a systems
and communications connectivity check called Spiral 3.
News Notes
- Gen. Ralph E. Eberhart became the fourth commander of Air Combat
Command June 11, succeeding Gen. Richard E. Hawley, who retired
after 35 years of service. Eberhart, a 1968 graduate of the US
Air Force Academy, came to ACC following his assignment at the
Pentagon as vice chief of staff of the Air Force. He's a command
pilot with more than 4,000 hours in fighter and trainer aircraft,
including 300 combat missions as a forward air controller in Vietnam.
As commander of ACC, Eberhart oversees 1,050 aircraft and approximately
103,400 active duty military and civilian people at 27 installations.
- The Air Force's fifth E-8C Joint STARS aircraft has been refurbished
and modified at Northrop Grumman's Lake Charles, La., facility
10 weeks ahead of plan. The aircraft will now have the Joint STARS
system itself installed and tested at another company plant in
Melbourne, Fla. The airplane should be delivered to the Air Force
by the end of October.
- An Air National Guard KC-135E that crashed Jan. 13 at Geilenkirchen
NATO AB, Germany, pitched up to a near vertical attitude because
the horizontal stabilizer trim was in a 7.5 nose-up condition.
The aircraft then stalled, according to an accident report released
June 4. The investigation was unable to determine how the stabilizer
trim came to be in that condition. The crash killed the four Air
National Guard crewmen. [See "ANG Tanker Crashes in Germany,"
March, p. 13.]
- The cause of the crash of an F-16 near Kangnung AB, South Korea,
last Aug. 24 was the failure of the No. 4 bearing in the engine,
according to an accident report, released in June. The failure
of an engine specialist to follow applicable technical orders
following discovery of debris on the magnetic chip detector was
a contributing factor, according to the accident investigation
board president.
- The first operational Marine helicopter unit assigned to Edwards
AFB, Calif., is settling in. Marine Aircraft Group 46, Det. B,
from MCAS El Toro, Calif., has been working to integrate its 21
helicopters and 400 people at Edwards. The unit's mission is to
transport heavy equipment, weapons, and supplies.
- Lt. Gen. Joseph E. Hurd, 7th Air Force commander, was recently
recognized for his outstanding contributions to maintaining peace
on the Korean peninsula. Hurd was awarded the 1998 Eugene M. Zuckert
Management Award,which was awarded in a Washington, D.C., ceremony
Aug. 4.
- On June 15, two USAF F-15C/D aircraft from the 53rd Wing, Nellis
AFB, Nev., crashed 60 miles east of the town of Tonopah while
on a routine mission. Both pilots survived the incident.
- Two Hurlburt Field, Fla., sergeants recently saved the Air Force
hundreds of thousands of dollars when they retrieved a broken
drill bit from an MH-53J engine. TSgt. Clayton Solberg and SSgt.
Robert Sausman, 16th Component Repair Squadron propulsion branch,
used ingenuity and a 24-inch-long wire to keep a T64-100 turboshaft
power plant from having to be removed for costly repairs.
- Six Air Force employees have won the Environmental Protection
Agency Bronze Medal for significant contributions to streamlining
environmental cleanup and closeout activities at federal facilities.
The recipients are John Smith, Mario Ierardi, Shirley Curry, and
Art Ditto, of the Air Force Base Conversion Agency, and Thomas
McCall and Marilyn Null of the Office of the Deputy Assistant
Secretary of the Air Force for Environment, Safety, and Occupational
Health.
- Operation Walking Shield is continuing to transfer excess Air
Force housing units to American Indian reservations, giving low-income
residents a chance to improve their lives. The program began in
1996 when Congress passed legislation allowing Grand Forks AFB,
N.D., to convey 463 units to the Rosebud Sioux, Turtle Mountain
Chippewa, and other nearby tribes. Transfer will be completed
over the next two years. Malmstrom AFB, Mont., will transfer 29
units in 1999 to the Northern Cheyenne, Chippewa, Cree, and Gros
Ventre tribes, among others.
- On June 11, Air Force officials announced that shopping for
military uniforms is now as easy as browsing the Internet. Catalogs
from the Army and Air Force Exchange Service are now available
on the World Wide Web at www.aafes.com.
- AFRC C-130 units deploying for Coronet Oak duty will no longer
be landing in Panama. Their new destination will be Luis Munoz
Marin IAP, P.R., where the rotational mission was moved in May
to comply with the terms of the Panama Canal Treaty of 1979.
- On June 29, the Administration nominated Carol DiBattiste, a
retired Air Force lawyer, to replace F. Whitten Peters as undersecretary
of the Air Force. Peters has been nominated to become Secretary
of the Air Force. DiBattiste enlisted in the service in 1971,
was commissioned in 1976, and retired as a major in 1991. She
is currently a deputy US attorney at the Department of Justice.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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