|
We Do Heavy Lifting
"We have just concluded the most successful air
campaign in the history of the world. We did so based
on technology that was developed back in the 1970s
and even prior to that time. The reason that we need
the F-22 as well as the Joint Strike Fighter is to
give us the same kind of capability that we had to
have in this war [in] Kosovo.
"In this situation you might take note that the
United States had to carry out most of the heavy lifting
during the first phase of the campaign because none
of our allies had the capability that we had to go
in with stealth aircraft, with precision guided munitions,
to go after the air defense systems [and] the command-and-control
systems in Kosovo.
"So we are depending upon technology that was
developed over three decades ago to carry our forces
today."
Through a Glass Darkly
"When we talk about the need for the F-22, I
don't think anyone can tell you exactly how the world
is going to unfold in 10 or 15 or 20 years from now.
But the fact is if we don't have the F-22, you will
be calling upon our pilots to fly aircraft, during
that time frame, roughly 30 or 35 years old.
"We don't ever want to put our pilots in a situation
where they have to fly against more and more sophisticated
air defenses and against aircraft that are being developed
by other countries-Russia, China, and others-that will
pose a challenge to them. So we think it's imperative
that we go forward with the F-22."
Pulling Out a Thread
"If you don't have the F-22, you have to go back
and recalculate exactly what you want the Joint Strike
Fighter to do. The Joint Strike Fighter's requirements
were designed and based upon the fact that we would
have an F-22 and a Joint Strike Fighter-the high end
being the F-22, which would take the place of the F-15
and F-117, and the so-called low end would be the Joint Strike
Fighter.
"So we need both, and if you were to ever cancel
out the F-22, you would have to go back and redesign
the Joint Strike Fighter-which pushes it well into
the future, which means we'd be relying upon the F-16,
F-14, other aircraft, and the F-15, well into the period
of 2015, 2020. That's not something we ever want to
put our pilots in a position of doing. ...
"We just completed the most successful air campaign
in history-depending upon the kind of high-low mix
that we've had developed back in the '70s, '80s, and
'90s. We need to have that kind of a mix for the future."
Cost of Three-Fighter Plan
"I went through this [cost analysis of DoD's
three-fighter modernization plan, comprising the F-22,
JSF, and Navy F-18E/F] during the so-called Quadrennial
Defense Review and made a determination at that time
[1997] that we had the F-18E/F models coming off the
lines as I was taking office, so it became important
to keep that line going.
"I also needed to have the F-18E/F models as
some leverage against the Joint Strike Fighter, which
at that point was still basically on paper. I needed
to have some leverage, so I cut the F-18E/F model purchase
by half, and then said we will acquire roughly half
as many as the current production schedule calls for,
and then in the event the Joint Strike Fighter doesn't
come on line as called for, or there are delays or
there's some reason why I need more leverage, then
I have the E/F model as some leverage to balance that
out.
"In the mean time, the F-22 gives the Joint Strike
Fighter the kind of [improved] capability also as far
as the stealth is concerned.
"So we looked at this very closely and decided
that we needed to have the highlow mix, and it
was important for our pilots for the future to be able
to take on either sophisticated air defense systems
or air-to-air type of combat scenarios. We want to
do so with the best that this country has to offer
and not with something that is 30 or 35 years old.
"So as far as Tacair is concerned, in the wake
of what took place in Kosovo, I would think we would
have more support rather than less."
F-15, F-117 Must Be Replaced
"The F-15-that is an aircraft, again, that needs
to be replaced by the F-22. So that line is still open,
but that's the purpose of the F-22, to replace the
F-15 and the F-117 stealth bomber. That gives you the
kind of air superiority that you need as we move into
the future.
"So all of that technology-I know it's easy to
say at this point, 'Why do we need it?' Well, we just
saw why we needed it in Kosovo where many of our allies
didn't have the capability that we did. We had to carry
the heavy load in the first part of the campaign. It
evened out somewhat, quite a bit actually, towards
the end of the campaign, where we carried about 53
percent of the airstrikes compared to 47 for the allies.
But in the beginning phase of that campaign, we had
to go in with our capability."
For the Successor Generation
"There may be other cases in the future, and
I certainly don't want to be in a position to shortchange
those pilots 10 and 12 years from now who will rely
upon the decisions we make today, and I will address
this this evening as well. Decisions-when Dick Cheney
[Secretary of Defense, 1989-93] finished up his term
in office, he pointed out that he would hope that decisions
he would make would be as important to his successor
as those that were made two or three decades prior
to his service. And those decisions made back in the
'70s served him well during the Persian Gulf War and
certainly in Panama as well.
"The decisions I make today in making recommendations
to the Congress to fund will, I hope, serve my successors,
because they will not come on line until 2008, 2015,
during that period where we get all of the modernization
in the Tacair. So I hope that the decisions I'm making
will benefit my successors as well."
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
|