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The Air Force, heavily
dependent for more than 40 years on workhorse KC-135
tankers, is about to begin a critical renewal effort.
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| The oldest and most problem-prone
tankers in the Air ForceKC-135Es such as this onewould
be replaced by 2011 with new, commercial tankers
leased from Boeing. Younger KC-135Rs could continue
in service 20 more years. |
Following years of frustrating
delays, the Pentagon finally gave the Air Force a
green light to replace
the aged air refuelers with state-of-the-art aircraft.
Edward C. Aldridge, speaking at his last news briefing
as Pentagon acquisition chief, said USAF can lease
100 tankers based on the Boeing 767-200. Boeing would
convert these aircraft into KC-767 commercial tanker
variants.
Aldridge announced the DOD decision on May 23. Congress
must review and approve it before the Air Force can
sign a contract.
The tanker modernization program, if it goes forward
as planned, would serve as a model for no-frills acquisition
that could be used to field urgently needed capability
quickly. Indeed, the Air Force said the program must
succeed if it is to head off what officials warn
could be catastrophes.
We cannot continue to fly KC-135s forever, Aldridge
asserted, and the longer you wait to recapitalize,
the more you run the risk ... of a fleet of those aircraft
being grounded for some reason.
The Aldridge announcement capped two years of round-robin
negotiation and horse-trading between and among
Boeing executives, members of Congress, and Pentagon
and
Air Force officials. The avowed goal was to shake
hands
over a deal that would not only satisfy service
requirements but also be affordable.
Aldridge declared that the deal in hand will do
both.
In brief, USAF would lease the 100 airplanes at
a per-airplane cost of $138.7 million. The Air
Force
also will have
the option to buy the KC-767s at the end of the
lease for an additional per-airplane cost of $40
million.
Aldridge, after seeing the terms of the deal as
it was finally stated, told Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld that the Pentagon should proceed
with the lease arrangement.
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| The KC-767 would be capable of carrying more
gas and taking off from shorter runways than the
KC-135 it replaces. Additionally, it would have
the electrical power to host communications relays
for other aircraft in the battle area. |
Only the First 100?
Rumsfeld agreed. Moreover, he also blessed language
stating the intent of the Defense Department to go
beyond the first 100 767s with additional
acquisitions. Aldridge did not establish a final
number.
The Air Force operates 544 KC-135s, said Aldridge,
so the ultimate number of new aircraft likely will
have to be several hundred. However,
DOD will not replace the Stratotankers one-for-one.
The Air Force has until Nov. 1 to deliver to Rumsfeld
a long-range plan for recapitalizing the tanker
fleet. (Recapitalize means the replacement
of one type of service equipment with newer equipment
of roughly equivalent or somewhat better capability.)
Aldridge said the plan will answer basic questions
about numbers of aircraft and configuration that
the
service will need after this initial lease.
The new aircraft will generally match the KC-135
in size but will exceed the old aircraft in capability,
having the power to take off faster, operate from
shorter
runways, and carry more fuel. It will also feature
advanced digital electronics.
Moreover, the new airplanes will be able to generate
an amount of electrical power sufficient to let
the airplanes serve as communication relays in
the sky.
Under terms of the deal, USAF would take delivery
of the first KC-767s in 2006. Production would
ramp up
to 20 airplanes per year. By 2009, the Air Force
will have received 67 tankers.
The new plan replaces an earlier Air Force effort
that encountered difficulties. Aldridge noted that,
had
the Air Force pursued its previous plan to start
recapitalization in 2006, it would not have received
the first airplane
until 2010, if then.
The only other optionbuying the new airplanes
outrightwould have required expenditure of
about $8 billion in the 2004-09 Future Years Defense
Program.
However, no one believed the Air Force could come
up with that kind of money.
We would have had to take it out of some other program, Aldridge
said. Wed rather lease and get the
airplanes sooner than spend that much money earlier
in the FYDP.
There is urgency to doing this, said Aldridge.
Tankers are an essential part of our ability
to do what we want to do in the military, he
went on, but the KC-135s are wearing out. After
40 years,
they are
plagued with corrosion, stress fractures, spar
fatigue, and other maladies of old age.
The only other large tanker in service is the KC-10,
of which the Air Force has only 59. If the KC-135
was grounded, it would mean massive problems for
the entire
military.
We need to do this right now, said Marvin R.
Sambur, the Air Forces acquisition chief.
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| If some problem grounded the KC-135 fleet, USAF
would have to rely on KC-10s such as this one,
of which there are only 59. A diversity of tankers
would pro-vide insurance against a fleetwide problem
in the venerable Stratotanker force. |
A Horrible Prospect
Sambur told Air Force Magazine that USAF is dependent
on KC-135s for almost 86 percent of its tanking.
A corrosion problem that called for immediate
grounding of the type would be a horrible prospect,
said Sambur, and would leave the service with
no alternative means for aerial refueling.
Tankers were heavily used in Gulf War II, solving
many access problems by extending the range of
coalition aircraft from bases outside the immediate
vicinity
of Iraq. (See The Squeeze on Air Mobility, July,
p. 22.) Tankers also routinely reduce the need
for large bases around the world. They permit
strike, cargo,
and intelligence aircraft to fly long distances
without landing. In the absence of the tankers,
the operating
radius of the entire fixed-wing inventory of
the US military would be sharply reduced.
For example, had there been no aerial tankers
in Operation Iraqi Freedom, Navy aviation would
have
only been able
to fly a small fraction of the missions it flew,
given the limited capacity of its own small refueling
airplanes.
Because of the long lead times involved, there
is no room for delay, Sambur asserted. The KC-135s may
not fall out of the sky if the service
doesnt
start recapitalizing now, he said, but five
to 10 years from now we could have catastrophes
on our
hands.
Sambur maintained that the Air Force needs to start
doing the prudent thing right now, which
means getting
the insurance policy.
Under the lease arrangement, Boeing would bear
all of the development risk. The aircraft are
to come
into USAF hands already in refueling configuration.
The Air Force is preparing not only the comprehensive
Nov. 1 report but also one that lays out the
service case on four issues:
- There is a need for the tankers.
- The service explored all options.
- Leasing is superior to actual purchase.
- The terms make it a good deal.
That report was destined to move quickly to Congress
after review at OSD and the Office of Management
and Budget.
One option favored by some in Congress was to
re-engine the KC-135 to increase its takeoff
power, cruise
speed, and other performance parameters.
However, such an upgrade will not buy you any
lifetime, and thats what we need to buy:
additional life, Aldridge said. He added: Were
going to be flying KC-135s for a long time, and
were
going to be very dependent on them, but we dont
have to be dependent on all of them.
Under lease terms, Boeings per-aircraft profit
cannot exceed 15 percent. Should Boeing achieve
better efficiency and achieve greater profits,
it will simply
have to reimburse the government or lower the
price to the Air Force, said Aldridge.
Aldridge explained that any cost overruns would
reduce Boeings profit. We will never
pay more ... for this airplane, he declared, and
could, if things become optimistic, pay somewhat
less.
Aldridge said he believes there will be sufficient
support on Capitol Hill to get the lease arrangement
approved.
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| Some favor re-engining the KC-135Es, as was done
with KC-135Rs like this one. However, senior leaders
point out that re-engining does nothing to solve
corrosion and age problems on the Stratotanker
fleet. |
McCains Complaint
A prominent opponent is Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.),
who argues that the KC-135 aircraft, though old,
could be maintained indefinitely and their effectiveness
dramatically increased by a re-engining program,
which
would cost less than new airplanes.
The General Accounting Office, a Congressional
watchdog agency, determined that re-engining
127 KC-135Es
would cost about $3.6 billion.
McCain calls the lease arrangement corporate
welfare designed to raise Boeings
bottom line. The aerospace giant has been hard
hit by
a downturn in the aircraft industry following
the Sept. 11 terror
attacks in New York and Washington.
McCain claimed Air Force Secretary James G. Roche
has been relentless in exaggerating aerial
tanker shortfalls in order to win approval of
the lease. This,
said McCain, contradicts the Air Forces
own studies, which have suggested the tanker
fleet
could be flown
at least until 2040 with proper maintenance.
Sambur maintains that the studies to which McCain
refers are old and no longer present an accurate
view of the
situation.
A lot of people come back and say, Well, you
had a report that said these things could last forever, Sambur
noted. People keep coming back at us with
this report, that the Air Force wrote a couple
of years
ago.
The report was written in good faith, Sambur
said. Soon after it was completed, he went
on, the Air Force came face to face with some disturbing,
real-life
experiences concerning depot maintenance, and
USAF found it had greatly underestimated the
effects of corrosion on these things.
Moreover, corrosion affects each airplane differently,
making it impossible to predict where and how
damage will occur.
Sambur said the previous report was like getting
a clean bill of health from a doctor. That
report is
virtually worthless two years later; two-year-old
assurances are no guarantee that you havent
developed a medical problem during the interim.
Critics who use
it to back their opposition to the lease are
ignoring two years worth of subsequent
experience, in Samburs view.
Now, with KC-135s having to be virtually rebuilt
every time they visit the depot for tear-down
inspections, the age issue has been sharply
drawn.
The Air Force was required to make the business
case for the lease to Rumsfeld, Sambur
said. Part of that was a comparison of the
present cost
to maintain the KC-135 and the cost to lease
the new airplanes.
Sambur said the Air Force took a conservative
approach to estimating the rising cost of KC-135
maintenance.
Even so, he said, the Air Force analysis showed
the service could go out and acquire the new
aircraft for the net present amount needed
to maintain the old aircraft.
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| In depot, KC-135s are having to be virtually
rebuilt as corrosion is found eating away at skin,
stringers, and spars. No one has ever operated
a fleet of 40-year-old aircraft before, and maintenance
costs are climbing more than 18 percent a year. |
The Cost of Aging
The KC-135 maintenance cost has increased since
1993 by an average of more than 18 percent
per year, Sambur
said.
This was the figure used in the official analyses,
but as these things get old ... youd
have a pretty good case to say, well, its
going to get worse than that, said Sambur.
Even with 100 new KC-767s, the Air Force will
have to keep at least some of the KC-135s flying
for
many years to come. If the Air Force brought
on board
a second batch of 100 leased tankersas
it thinks it must doit would still be
flying KC-135s for decades, Sambur said.
Because no one has ever flown whole fleets
of 40-year-old airplanes, its impossible
to say with certainty how long the KC-135s
will last, Sambur added.
The Air Force wants to take out of service
the 133 most aged KC-135Es. Sambur said it
is simply
an issue
of money. Air Mobility Command said these tankers
are already flying with restrictions, are the
most problem-prone,
and require the most extensive depot maintenance.
Of the $138.7-million-per-KC-767 cost, $131
million will accrue to Boeing to cover materials,
labor,
and provide a profit margin. The other $7.7
million per
aircraft will go to a special entity set
up to administer the lease. It will cover interest
payments for Boeing construction loans and
long-lead purchases.
Boeing will also perform major maintenance
and overhauls on the aircraft and will receive
about
$3.6 million
per aircraft per year for this work.
When the legislation enabling the lease was
enacted, some suggested that the Air Force
would have
to pay both to modify the airplanes to tanker
configuration,
then, at the end of the lease, convert them
back to cargo or passenger configuration. There
was
also
the
suggestionfrom Roche himselfthat
USAF would receive white tailsairplanes
made available by cancellations of commercial
orders.
This is not true in either case, according
to Bob Gower, Boeings vice president
for tanker programs.
All of the airplanes are new build airplanes,
and none of them are sitting on our ramp, Gower
told Air Force Magazine.
Aldridge suggested that, because the financially
strapped Boeing might shut down its 767 line,
the Air Force
had a need to move quickly. According to
Boeing officials, this is also not true.
Gower asserted, Our plans
were and are to continue producing the 767
as long as its commercially viable,
and its
still commercially viable.
Boeing has enough tooling to support the
production of as many as seven 767s a month
at its Bremerton,
Wash., plant, Gower said. Green tail 767s
would go to Boeings Wichita, Kan.,
facility for conversion to tanker configuration.
The 767-200 made its debut in 1982, but the
aircraft has been continually updated since
then, Gower
said. The model that is being offered to
the Air Force
has an all-digital cockpit, as well as a
new boom operators
station just aft of the cockpit. From there,
the boom operator can observe all the aircraft
behind
the tanker
using multiple cameras. The station will
be identical to a simulator, saving training
costs.
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| The PACER CRAG KC-135 update brought the fleet
up to current international navigation and communications
standards and was initially thought sufficient
to keep the fleet flying indefinitely. Reality
has since set in. The Pentagon intends to go beyond
100 KC-767s, eventually replacing most of the fleet. |
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Internet in the Sky
The airplane will also have a 120 KVA generator
to support the additional communications
gear USAF wants
to install on the airplane, making it a smart
tanker. The generator is included in
the price, and so is Link 16 data-sharing
capability, but the
additional communications gearwhich
would make the airplane an Internet
in the sky, according
to Chief of Staff Gen. John P. Jumperwould
be an extra cost.
The KC-767 will also have a receptacle so
that it, too, can be refueled in midair.
This feature
will
multiply the options available to combatant
commanders. So will
the fact that the KC-767, fully loaded, will
be able to take off using a runway of only
7,700 feet.
The
KC-135 requires more than 12,000 feet.
The original estimate to lease 100 airplanes
ran to $26 billion. The price has now fallen
to $16
billion, but, according to Aldridge, that
was possible only
under certain conditions. The most important
was the
Pentagons declaration of its intent
to expand the arrangement beyond just 100
airplanes. Boeing
needed to see this intent, said Aldridge,
because it eliminated
some of the risk the company faced.
Moreover, caps were imposed on some expenses,
Aldridge noted, and the Air Force agreed
to do without certain
items that were on the original work plan. As
the Air Force has gone through this process, said
Gower, they really have used the cost-as-an-independent-variable
approach in trying to figure out what they
would like to have and what they can afford.
Example: Though USAF wanted plumbing in the
wings for wingtip probe-and-drogue refueling,
to lower
cost,
it dropped the requirement. The aircraft
will have both a boom-type refueling system
and
a probe-and-drogue,
both on the centerline.
The Air Force wanted a combi configuration
permitting it to carry passengers and cargo at
the same time. This would have required building
a special
bulkhead, so the plan was dropped.
Sambur bristled at the suggestion that the
Air Force was working a special deal to bail
out
Boeing. He
maintained that, had the Air Force attempted
to start a new tanker
from scratch, it could easily have taken
until the mid-2010s to get the first airplane,
and
development costs would probably have killed
the project at
the
outset.
Sambur said the project is an example of agile
acquisition. The idea was to buy something proven,
off the shelf, [that] gives us great capability.
Pressure from OMB, as well as the federally
funded think tank Institute for Defense Analyses,
kept
the price down, too, Sambur added. Thanks
to this pressure,
he went on, We were able to get Boeing
to really prove they were giving us a good
deal.
One of the hardest sells was the Pentagons
program analysis and evaluation shop, Sambur
noted. PA&E
... was very concerned about whether we really
needed a tanker. They were convinced at the
outset that we
could re-engine [the KC-135]. And they had
some very good arguments.
In the end, however, the constellation of
need, price, opportunity, and logic won
the day.
The Basing Plan for the Tankers
The 100 Boeing KC-767 aerial refueling aircraft
to be leased by the Air Force would be divided
among three bases, according to an initial tanker
roadmap released by the service on June 18.
The first active duty base to receive the new
767 tankers will be Fairchild AFB, Wash. Deliveries
will start in 2006, and the base eventually will
have 32 KC-767s. Following Fairchild will be Grand
Forks AFB, N.D., getting up to 32 by 2009, and
MacDill AFB, Fla., 32 by 2011.
USAF plans to add infrastructure and personnel
at all three locations.
The remaining four KC-767s will be backup inventory
to replace aircraft down for maintenance or otherwise
sidelined from duty.
The proposed lease of the new tankers coincides
with the planned retirement of all remaining KC-135Esthe
average age of which exceeds 43 yearsand
the redistribution of the KC-135R fleet. (See Aerospace
World: Plans Set for Tanker Basing, p. 13.) |
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