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The delivery of more than two dozen C-17 transports
in the last three years has given military airlift
a much-needed shot in the arm, but even so, air mobility
forces are among the oldest and most neglected of the
Air Force's assets. Thanks to a recent comprehensive
strategy review and some enlightened leadership, however,
the situation may, finally, be turning around.
The Pentagon's Quadrennial Defense Review, completed
last spring, was a cutting machine that lopped off
personnel and force structure in many mission areas.
However, it spared airlift and aerial refueling forces.
QDR officials recognized that smaller forces might
be adequate to their missions if, and only if, they
could be transported swiftly and over great distances.
In the final QDR report, defense officials reaffirmed
that the US must be able to fight two Major Theater
Wars at more or less the same time. They further concluded
that, without a healthy and up-to-date air mobility
force, hopes of achieving that strategic goal would
be little more than wishful thinking.
The QDR results gratified Gen. Walter Kross, commander
in chief of US Transportation Command and commander
of the Air Force's Air Mobility Command. He said he
was pleased to see new emphasis being put on airlift
and even more pleased at the reshuffling of scarce
defense dollars that resulted.
The Office of the Secretary of Defense is "putting
their money where their mouths are," Kross said
in an interview with Air Force Magazine. In
funds allocated, he explained, "we've edged up
a little." The general added that the QDR evinced,
more than any previous study, "a clear recognition
of how important air mobility is going to be in support
of our national military strategy" and that in
the future, "it might be even more important than
it is today."
The QDR concluded that USAF should make no reduction
in the size of its airlift or tanker fleets. Indeed,
it noted, the loss of overseas bases and the spread
of "Smaller-scale Contingencies" will cause
the Pentagon to reevaluate and give "increased
emphasis" to lift in future budgets.
Kross said that, without a sustained injection of
funds during the next few years, airlift forces would
not be up to the task given them and would struggle
to meet even basic requirements. He pointed to the
QDR view that airlift has a role not only in fighting
two theater wars but also in supporting the many Smaller-scale
Contingencies, such as humanitarian missions, that
have cropped up more frequently in the last decade.
"Tremendous Support"
"We have seen a tremendous amount of support
... from the Air Force ... and OSD" in putting
resources toward long-deferred modernization and renewal
projects, Kross reported. Air mobility projects were
preserved in the current five-year defense plan "while
a lot of other things were cut."
The QDR effectively laid to rest the idea that the
United States can meet its military obligations with
fewer than 120 C-17s, blessing the multiyear buy of
the airplane and endorsing the idea of direct-to-the-front
strategic lift. Plans call for the 120-aircraft C-17
fleet to replace 256 Air Force C-141 long-range airlifters
as the backbone of the air mobility force.
After the C-17, however, priorities for air mobility
shift to the less glamorous but equally vital task
of updating the rest of the airlift fleet with new
international-standard avionics. In short order, the
Global Air Traffic Management, or GATM, project went
from being virtually a budgetary nonentity to a recognized
priority.
| The
Mobility Force Selected
Airlift/Tanker Aircraft Types |
| Aircraft
Type |
Active |
AFRC |
ANG |
Total |
| C-5
Galaxy |
81 |
32 |
13 |
126 |
| C-10
(KC-10) Extender |
59 |
0 |
0 |
59 |
| C-17
Globemaster III |
27 |
0 |
0 |
27 |
| C-141
Starlifter |
156 |
46 |
18 |
220 |
| C-130
Hercules |
311 |
141 |
242 |
694 |
| C-135
(KC-135) Stratolifter |
303 |
72 |
224 |
599 |
| Total |
937 |
291 |
497 |
1,725 |
| Note:
Figures current at beginning of Fiscal 1997.
C-130 and C-135 lines include a few special
purpose aircraft. Figures denote total aircraft
inventories. |
"Last year ... there wasn't even a name 'GATM,'
let alone the amount of monies we're going to see," Kross
noted, adding that, after the QDR, it "got immediate
attention."
The GATM project will provide AMC airplanes with the
avionics they need to be certified to operate out of
major airports and fly at preferred altitudes under
new flight control regimes adopted worldwide. Without
the upgrades--some of which must be installed in less
than a year--AMC airplanes would not be able to fly
the most efficient routes.
After GATM, Kross said the next priority is rather
down-to-earth: repairing and renewing the fuel handling
infrastructure at US bases at home and abroad.
"We have ... a very large--almost $1 billion--backlog
of deteriorating fuel infrastructure around the world," at
places like Andersen AFB, Guam, Yokota AB, Japan, and
Hickam AFB, Hawaii, Kross explained. "Pipelines,
hydrants, storage tanks--all the things we need in
our en route locations in order to support both Major
Theater Wars."
This infrastructure has languished for five years
because, in 1992, the Defense Logistics Agency was
given the maintenance responsibility but no money.
Show the Money
The DLA was "never given the resourcing to handle
it, so it went chronically underfunded," Kross
said. After the situation was explained to Deputy Defense
Secretary John J. Hamre--the former DoD comptroller--DoD
scavenged money from other parts of the budget to fund
GATM and the fuel infrastructure accounts. GATM will
get between $70 million and $100 million a year, Kross
said, while the preferred approach to the fuel infrastructure
project is to carry out a $100 million per year effort
that can wipe out most of the maintenance backlog in
five years.
"The warfighting CINCs," said Kross, "have
been unanimous in their strong support and partnership
in helping me justify these requirements." He
added that support also has come from the Joint Requirements
Oversight Council and Defense Resources Board, which
weigh funding priorities among the services.
"We had to justify our requirements, but the
requirements are there, they're solid, and getting
support," Kross said. These add-on projects are "over
and above the TOA [Total Obligational Authority]" in
the Air Force budget.
Kross also reported a huge turnaround on another seemingly
mundane but still critical program: loading equipment.
The vast majority of AMC's cargo handling gear is failure-prone
and antiquated, but relief is arriving in the form
of a new 60,000-pound loader that is exceeding all
expectations.
"Remember--last year we had zero in the 60K [loader]
line," Kross noted. "This year we've got
... [about] $80 million to buy 60" of the new
loaders.
"They're coming off the production line; they're
doing very well," he noted.
The loader has been named the "Tunner" after
the late Lt. Gen. William H. Tunner, the airlifter
famed for his roles in World War II operations over "the
Hump" into China, the Berlin Airlift, and airlift
in the Korean War. The choice of name was not a whim,
Kross said. "For the first time, we've given the
name of somebody who's really a central figure in our
heritage ... to a piece of materiel handling equipment.
... It calls attention to how important strong, workable,
reliable, materiel handling equipment is to our entire
process. This thing replaces three pieces of equipment
and a lot of people."
He described ceremonies marking the delivery of the
first Tunner at Ramstein AB, Germany, in which a single
technician was able to drive the loader off a C-5 transport,
raise it to full height, and "plug it right into
the side of a KC-10" sharing the ramp. This one
airman then loaded a KC-10 pallet onto the Tunner,
lowered it, drove it to a waiting C-130, and loaded
it on the smaller airplane.
Seven-Minute Shift
"That took seven minutes," Kross said. "That
is the seamless transition between strategic and theater
lift."
With current gear, the same transfer would have required
three pieces of equipment and nearly an hour, assuming
that none of the old equipment broke down in the process.
The Tunner has a mean time between failure of 350 hours.
"This is phenomenal," Kross enthused. He
noted that Dover AFB, Del., and Travis AFB, Calif.,
will be the first bases to get the new loader.
While it is hard to argue against upgrading equipment
and facilities, Kross noted one area where modernization
is posing a political rather than technical problem.
The area in question is theater airlift.
The Air Force, Air Force Reserve Command, and Air
National Guard all maintain C-130s in their inventories.
Last year, a theater airlift study determined that
about 50 C-130s could be withdrawn from service because
they were excess to USAF's requirements. Kross observed
that Congress has forced the withdrawal of the C-130s
from the Active force, where they can't be spared,
rather than Guard and Reserve units, where they can.
Moreover, he pointed out, Congress has been adding
funds to buy brand-new C-130J airplanes for the Air
Force for the last few years, though USAF has asked
only for a few to test and evaluate. The new airplanes
are earmarked to go to Reserve and Guard units rather
than the Active force.
Such Congressional tinkering with the size and composition
of the theater airlift force poses potential hazards
in the not-too-distant future, Kross said.
The situation is "upside down, inside out," he
warned, when the Reserve and Guard have the newest
airplanes and the Active forces--especially those overseas
that are working harder--have the oldest and least-reliable
airplanes. The situation has occurred gradually "over
the last 20 years by interests that were not based
on centralized planning but rather on constituent interests," Kross
said. "We have to tackle that."
While he's not complaining about Congress adding money
for new airplanes, Kross is concerned that if the modernization
mix between Active and Guard/Reserve gets too out of
balance, it could pose problems.
He noted that the C-130 schoolhouse at Little Rock
AFB, Ark., is flying airplanes far older than those
found in operational squadrons. He also warned that
putting the newest airplanes in the Guard and Reserve
means that a "sense of ownership" isn't developing
in the Active force, suggesting there may not be the
incentive to lay in the depot support and spare parts
needed to operate the new J models.
"The J is 80 percent a new airplane," Kross
said. The change looks "incremental," but "it
is, indeed, a new airplane," and he worries that
while Congress is adding aircraft, it is neglecting
to add the monies needed to support them.
Something Wrong
"There's something wrong with this picture," Kross
said.
"The Guard and Reserve [are] built on Active
forces operating the same kind of equipment," he
asserted, adding that there should at least be a "one
for one" side-by-side equipage of the Active and
Reserve component airlift structure. He said, "If
all the airplanes were going into the Active force,
and none were going into the Guard and Reserve, I'd
be the first person to tell you that was wrong, too,
because that's not 'Total Force.' "
To illustrate the problem, he pointed out that the
Active forces will retire their last C-141s in 2003,
but the last Reserve units won't release theirs until
2006.
"You will find that they are nervous ... about
that three-year period and us not having a proper sense
of ownership in the interim," Kross reported. "Well,
if they're worried about it for the -141, they ought
to be seriously concerned about it for the -130J."
To keep like airplanes together, USAF has earmarked
most of the C-130Js to update the hurricane-chaser
squadron, which is getting 11 C-130Js, and its jamming
squadrons, which are getting three. The remaining,
currently funded C-130Js--16 airplanes--are going to
Reserve and Guard cargo squadrons.
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What the QDR Said
The final report of the Quadrennial Defense
Review, released in May 1997, said the following
about air mobility forces:
"A robust and effective strategic lift
capability is critical. ... The QDR reaffirmed
DoD's baseline requirements for intertheater
mobility, as outlined in the 1995 Mobility Requirements
Study BottomUp Review Update. To meet our
force deployment objectives, the mobility update
recommended an airlift capability of approximately
50 million ton-miles per day. ... The review
reaffirmed these requirements which, in turn,
will guide DoD's long-range planning for strategic
mobility forces. ...
"The burdens placed on US strategic mobility
forces will not become less demanding in the
future. To the contrary, the potential demands
of peacetime engagement, reduced infrastructure
at overseas bases needed to support airlift en
route to a crisis, the likelihood of Smaller-scale
Contingencies worldwide, and the increased possibility
of confronting nuclear, biological, and chemical
threats all pose challenges for mobility forces
that were not accounted for in the mobility update.
"These and other key issues will be evaluated
and will receive increased emphasis as DoD formulates
upcoming budget requests for strategic mobility
programs." |
The Air Force is looking at the problem of bedding
down, fielding, and supporting the C-130J, and Kross
said a "tiger team" is studying the best
solutions. Part of the solution may be to task some
Reserve or Guard units to overseas assignments on a
semipermanent basis, so the most modern airplanes are
located where they'll be most in demand.
Though there's no deadline for a plan, it will likely
be made final by May 1998, when the services must submit
their five-year Program Objective Memorandum for DoD
reviews.
"The C-130J is a wake-up call that the way we
are procuring airplanes for our tactical airlift forces
... is not pertinent as it relates to our wartime and
peacetime requirements," Kross asserted. "We
ought to modernize the Active [force], Guard, and Reserve
at the same time."
The 1996 theater airlift study also found that the
C-17 could serve a very important role within a theater--as
it did in Bosnia in late 1995 and early 1996--and not
just as a strategic airlifter. It suggested that, for
this purpose, the Air Force should buy two additional
squadrons--a total of 32 airplanes. However, Kross
said that this particular requirement is "very
fuzzy" yet.
What has been more sharply defined is a requirement
to replace retiring special operations C-141s that
have no designated successor, yet.
"No one ever swept up those special operations
requirements ... in support of several critical plans" in
the C-17 requirement of 120 airplanes, Kross said.
Because the C-17 is a larger airplane than the C-141,
and already has a night vision gogglescompatible
cockpit, it's unlikely that they would be bought as
one-for-one replacements for the 13 C-141s now doing
the special ops job.
"And so, we believe that we need at least another
squadron of C-17s, over and above the [currently planned]
120, in order to handle those special operations requirements,
which are simultaneous with Major Theater War requirements," Kross
revealed.
"At Least" 120 C-17s
He also noted that the Defense Planning Guidance--which
lays out the ground rules for all procurement--was
changed this year to read "that the Air Force
should buy at least 120" C-17s. While he's not
pushing now for more C-17s--"This is not something
we need to do this year or next year"--Kross said, "We
are building the justification."
There had been 33 C-17s delivered by early fall, of
which about 24 were in squadron service and the rest
in test or modification. The schedule calls for nine
to be built in Fiscal 1998, 13 in Fiscal 1999, and
15 a year from 2000-02, with a close-out build of five
in 2003, under the multiyear procurement contract.
However, before the Air Force buys "the 121st
or 141st" model of the C-17, it must step up to
the task of upgrading the giant C-5 transport, Kross
asserted.
AMC has commissioned the Institute for Defense Analyses,
located in the Washington area, to provide "an
unimpeachable third source" opinion on whether,
indeed, upgrading the C-5 makes more sense than some
other alternative to maintaining the outsize-load airlift
force, Kross noted.
The Air Force bought two distinctly different C-5
models at widely separated times. USAF took delivery
of 81 C-5As between December 1969 and May 1973. Under
a subsequent major modification program, USAF extended
the service life of C-5A wings by 30,000 flight hours.
Modification of all aircraft in the inventory took
place between 1982 and 1987.
The first C-5B, incorporating major improvements in
the wings and avionics, arrived in January 1986. Fifty
were delivered by April 1989.
At present, the Air Force has 126 C-5s of all types
in Active, Reserve, and Guard units.
Due to engine and avionics problems, the C-5 is only
achieving a departure rate of about 80 percent, causing
vexing problems in "flow management." Culprits
are unreliable engines and an outdated avionics suite
and cockpit. Lockheed Martin has made an unofficial
proposal to upgrade the C-5 with, among other things,
new CF6 engines--which would be leased--and a glass
cockpit for around $30 million$40 million per
airplane.
Kross thinks there are few alternatives that could
match a C-5 upgrade in capability delivered for the
cost.
Noting that the C-5s generally have about 60,000 hours
remaining--80 percent of their structural life span--Kross
concluded "it would be very foolish" to discard
the airplane and buy something new. This is especially
true, he said, in light of the fact that infrastructure,
simulators, and spare parts for the airplane "all
exist already," and flight and ground maintenance
crews are "already trained."
It Takes Two
Kross believes it would be a mistake to assemble a
fleet made exclusively of C-17s to do the airlift mission. "What
the CINCTRANS needs is [about] 250 strategic airlift
airplanes ... to do its work: That's 120 C-17s and
126 C-5s," he said. "You wouldn't ever want
to have 250 of the same kind of airplanes ... because
you have to hedge against having your entire fleet
grounded for some common cause."
If the C-5 could be brought up to a departure rate
of 94 percent, then "I'm able to do a really tremendous
flow," said the general. "It's an exponential
thing."
While no formal negotiations on a C-5 upgrade have
taken place, Air Staff planners are already struggling
with how to handle the leasing arrangement. A proposal
to lease new engines for the B-52 fleet last year was
abandoned because of indemnification issues. The question
of termination liability--who has responsibility for
the airplanes and who takes the loss in the event of
accident or program termination--has proved so thorny
that the replacement of a handful of VIP airplanes
had to be changed from a leasing arrangement to an
outright purchase.
At present, seven obsolete and deteriorating VC-137
airplanes are being replaced with four C-32s--a special
variant of the Boeing 757--and two small "VC-X" airplanes,
which will be Gulfstream 5 aircraft.
Unless the parties can resolve the indemnification
issue, the C-5 upgrade with new engines could become
unaffordable. Next year, the Pentagon will launch a
formal study to consider alternatives to a C-5 upgrade,
in case the legal problem proves intractable.
Kross is keen on the upgrade idea, however, especially
since the engines would come with a 10-year warranty.
According to the general, "If anything goes wrong,
they fix it for free, because the engines are that
reliable."
One of the long-awaited upgrades that will go forward
is Pacer CRAG, a program to update the Air Force's
KC-135s with new avionics that improve their reliability
and capability while eliminating the need for a navigator.
The program was set to go forward last winter, but
Kross halted the project because "in the form
that it was in last year, [it] actually yielded less
combat capability." The new color radar planned
for the upgrade had a narrower beam than the old radar,
making formation flying more difficult, "so we
had to add another piece of equipment so we could do
formation right," Kross reported. The new equipment
is a collision avoidance system, and operational testing
has shown the new suite to be a winner.
The update was delayed nine months, "and in that
I've had to keep the navigators in the force longer," said
Kross. He added, "Now, the light is at the end
of the tunnel, we've got an even better Pacer CRAG
capability than we would have had before, and it will
be entering the force in earnest in Fiscal Years '98
and '99." Kross explained that all 590 KC-135s
are set to receive the upgrade, which also includes
inertial navigation systems, Global Positioning System
capability, assorted air traffic control improvements,
and extensive software improvements.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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