Last March 17, two F-15Cs
out of Nellis AFB, Nev., collided in midair during
simulated air-to-air combat. The pilots suffered only
minor injuries, but one fighter was destroyed when
it crashed to the ground. The other sustained moderate
damage.
The accident was the Air
Forces fifth midair
collision in less than five monthsa sobering
event for service officials, who have watched aviation
accident rates climb in the past few years.
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| USAF is now grappling with accident trends
that lack smoking
gun causes. This crash at Keesler AFB, Miss., resulted in $2.5
million in damage to the T-1. |
In 2000, USAF had its all-time-best
flying safety year. The records in the past three
years have
been worsein
2002, much worse. The major aircraft accident rate
in 2002 was nearly 30 percent higher than in 2000.
Last year proved only somewhat less troubling.
Gen. John P. Jumper, Chief
of Staff, told Air Force personnel in December 2002
that the service cannot
tolerate, nor sustain, this level of loss.
The Air Force has made
steady progress in aviation safety ever since it
became a separate service
in 1947. However, Jumper was concerned that USAF
might
have
reached a plateau during the last
decade. While
I would like to think that our [2002] mishap
experience is an anomaly, I am concerned it may
be a negative
trend, Jumper wrote in a memo at the conclusion
of that worrisome year.
The Air Forces Class
A flight mishap rate dropped dramatically through
the late 1940s and 1950s and continued
a fairly steady decline until 1992. (The Class
A flight mishap rate refers to the number of mishaps
per 100,000
flying hours. The term Class A refers
to mishaps that result in a death, permanent
disability,
loss of an aircraft, or damage of more than
$1 million.)
In 1947, this benchmark
rate was 44.22. Twelve years later, it fell below
10 for the first
time. In 1983,
the rate fell below two for the first time.
Ever since, it has been in the ones, but
progress beyond that has been hard to achieve.
All obvious, easy fixes
have been made.
Air Force officials say the service goal
is zero accidents. Is that target realistic?
Maj.
Gen.
Kenneth W. Hess,
USAF chief of safety, pointed out that, what
we [Air Force members] do is, by definition,
dangerous.
The Air Force is not an airline and will
always fly a large number of inherently risky
combat
missions, frequently in single-engine aircraft.
Even training
missions are dangerous. We are in a
high risk business, said Hess.
The Human Factor
Officials found human error to be a common
thread in the accidents. The USAF analysis
showed that
two-thirds of the 2002 accidents resulted
primarily from human-factor
issues, which generally means poor situational
awareness during flight.
In the case of midair collisions, a pilots
loss of situational awareness is frequently cited as
a determining
factor. You really have to hammer away
at the fact that these mishaps are preventable, Hess
maintained.
Hess said that he had never seen an unpreventable
mishap. Lessons learned from previous accidents
work their
way into the system in the form of improvements
to parts, procedures, and training.
The Air Force safety program, said officials,
relies on commanders to ensure that their
personnel are
properly trained and that safety remains
uppermost in the minds
of airmen.
We will get better, Hess asserted, adding that nobody
is naive about the difficulty of the
task. Some improvements will take time. Changes
in training and
procedures, for instance, can take two years
or more to implement.
In the period 1993 to 2002, USAF lost 85
aircraft and suffered 18 fatalities in
accidents stemming
from power
plant and other systems failures. In the
same period, human error caused the loss
of 127
aircraft and
244 personnel. Some human factor-type accidents
are controlled-flight-into-terrain
(CFIT), pilots losing control in flight,
and midair collisions.
Officials said that CFIT errors take the
greatest toll on the Air Force. They claim
an average
of 13 fatalities
and six aircraft per year, according to
USAF data. Typically, the problem is aircrew
loss
of situational
awareness.
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| Accidents have a bewildering array of causes,
some obvious, some subtle. In 2003 alone, wildlife
strikes, bolt failures, blown tires, engine flameouts,
and midair collisions were all cited as causes
of Class A mishaps. |
However, the Air Force has not found a
systemic training or awareness problem
that accounts
for CFIT accidents.
Hess said that the very nature of combat
flight makes CFIT accidents an ever-present
danger.
Pilots flying
and maneuvering at high speeds, frequently
at low altitudes, are vulnerable to crashes.
The
safety
chief said the
Air Force must simply work to drive their
frequency as low as possible.
Whats left for us is to concentrate on
the humans, where the humans make errors and mistakes, Hess
said.
Beyond human error, the service can find
no smoking
gun in the recent accidents. The
mishaps did not have a single predominant
cause, as was the case
in the mid-1990s, when severe engine
reliability problems caused many F-15
and F-16 crashes.
From 1993 through 1997, single-engine
F-16 fighters each year had the most
engine
failures of USAF
aircraft. An extensive engine improvement
program brought down
the number of power plant-related crashes.
In 2003, a variety of factors were at
work, ranging from bird strikes and single-bolt
failures to
blown tires and catastrophic engine flameouts.
The Optempo Issue
A potential contributing factor has been
USAFs
high operational tempo since 9/11. One
USAF safety analysis reported, Flight
crews pressing for mission accomplishment
despite high operational risk
factors drove an [operations] spike in
FY02.
In an interview last fall, Jumper agreed
that operational tempo can affect flight
safety. Ive just
seen this over a number of yearsthis
general correlation between stress level
and mishap rates, said
the Chief of Staff. The pace of recent
operations has resulted in supervision
stretched thin [and] maintenance stretched
thin, Jumper added, though
he noted that operational strains are not
an excuse for safety lapses.
When you get busy, and youre thinking about your
next deployment, ... and its rush,
rush, rush, thats when the safety
aspects start to drift away, Jumper
explained. Steps to enhance safety need
to be brought back to center, he
went on. Thats
what our emphasis has been.
It is difficult to prove a direct correlation
between mishaps and operational tempo.
Though it seems
logical that high optempo contributes
to mishaps, stress
on the force is almost never cited
as a probable mishap
cause, said retired Maj. Gen. Timothy
A. Peppe, a former chief of Air Force
safety.
When you go digging in to the root causes
of a crash, Peppe said, you cannot tie them directly
to the optempo. Something else
is almost always found to be the
culprit.
An exception was the Feb. 13, 2003,
crash of an Air Force Special Operations
Command
MH-53M
while
landing
at the Udairi Range in Kuwait. The
16 troops aboard the helicopter had
completed
a realistic,
nighttime
training mission. None were seriously
injured, but the helicopter sustained
damage of
more than $15
million.
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| The goal is zero mishaps,
but safety rates have stagnated in recent years.
Bucking
the trend, F-16s
in 2002 had their safest year ever. Here, North
Dakota ANGs 119th Fighter Wing celebrates
60,000 accident-free hours. |
A USAF accident investigation board
laid blame for the mishap on a
combination of inadequate mission
preparation and aircraft design deficiency. The
aircrew had not sufficiently studied
the planned landing site to determine
its acceptable landing tolerances.
Consequently, the pilot landed
on terrain that did not accommodate
his touchdown profile, according
to the accident report.
Bad Year for Helos
USAF helicopters, as a rule, have
had low mishap rates over the yearsuntil
2002, that is. In that year, the
USAF helicopter community suffered
more Class A
mishaps than it had since 1969, a
year of high Vietnam War activity.
In 2002, USAF sustained 25 operational
aircraft mishaps, nine of which involved
helicopters.
Of those nine
accidents, four occurred in Southwest
Asia. In 2003, the number
of helicopter mishaps dropped to
four.
Leading Causes of USAF
Class A Mishaps and Fatalities
FY 1993-2002 |
 |
The helicopter Class A mishap rates
in 2002 and 2003 were 15.74 and 5.96,
respectively.
The fighter/attack
aircraft rates for those years were
far lower,
2.16
and 2.54.
Hess cautioned that it is a mistake
to become fixated on the mishap rates
in
any single
year. Too many curious
things can lead to an unrepresentative
spike in the rates, he argued.
Can we improve? Hess asked. Can
we get better than a 1.4 [overall] mishap rate? I think
the
answer to that question is yes.
Hess noted that the next generation
of airplanes will be far more reliable
than
the older
generation of C-5,
F-15, and F-16 aircraft, which
are based on technology that is
25 to
30 years
old.
Its a generational thing, he said.
C-17s, F/A-22s, and F-35sall designed with advanced
computers and with years of data
about airplane crashesin
a few years will dominate USAFs
fleet.
Of course, new systems tend to
produce more surprise mishaps.
Such is the
case with todays C-17.
It is highly reliable, but, when
it breaks, it breaks
in unexpected ways.
Still, even with the surprises
inherent in new systems, Hess
emphasized, I think were going to
be able to move to another level of safer operations.
| USAF Fatalities From Class A Mishaps |
 |
| USAF Class A Mishaps |
 |
| Between 1993 and 2003, the Air Force lost 320
airmen and 274 aircraft to mishaps, at a cost of
more than $6.2 billion. |
Rumsfeld Weighs In
The rise in aviation mishaps across all services
during 2002 prompted Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld to set a new goal. Each service was
called on to cut mishaps and mishap rates in
half by 2005.
World-class organizations do not tolerate
preventable accidents, Rumsfeld declared
in a May 2003 memo.
In 2002, accidents claimed 82 personnel and
63 aircraft. Air Force accidents accounted for
22
fatalities and 19 destroyed aircraft.
The Defense Department must turn this
situation around, Rumsfeld wrote. He called
the new goal achievable and said
it will
directly increase our operational readiness.
Reducing mishaps by 50 percent in two years
is ambitious. Each service already takes safety
seriously. However, USAFs chief of safety,
Maj. Gen. Kenneth W. Hess, said that it is good
to put
a marker out there.
Whether the goal is attainable is irrelevant,
Hess said, because the ultimate goal is zero
mishaps.
In 2003, the Air Force had three fewer mishaps
due to accidents and reduced its Class A mishap
rate from 1.48 in 2002 to 1.39 in 2003. (For
comparison with the other services, see the table
below.)
Rumsfeld tasked DODs personnel and readiness
director, David S.C. Chu, to lead the mishap
reduction effort. Chu later established the DOD
Safety Oversight
Council and established several service-led task
forces to develop ideas and plans. Air Force
general officers head two of the task forces.
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