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Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. John P. Jumper started
his new job the week before the Sept. 11 attacks. Ever
since, he has been working to balance the immediate
needs of fighting a global war on terrorism with the
long-term investments required to keep the Air Force
at the forefront of military power. On May 2, he met
with the Defense Writers Group in Washington, D.C.
Following are excerpts:
Gulf War II
Though the Air Force is about 40 percent smaller than
it was in 1991, it is a far more
capable force now and would make a more effective showing if the US had to
fight Iraq a second time, even without the basing support of Saudi Arabia,
Jumper said.
"The capability that we have has ... advanced
greatly since 1990-91. We saw our airplanes come out
of [RAF] Fairford in England and [RAF] Lakenheath in
England--both bombers and fighters--transiting thousands
of miles or so to targets in Kosovo. We have the capacity
to deal with these things ... from significant ranges.
... We can stand off from great ranges and do our job."
Asked to describe the difference between USAF capability
in 1991 and 11 years later, Jumper said, "The
biggest changes that we have seen are in the area we
call time-critical targeting. It is the ability to
take the intelligence assets--which for years went
on a cycle of collect, analyze, report--and to actually
put them in the kill cycle so that now they are part
of find, fix, track, target, engage, and assess. And
we are doing this in minutes, not hours or days.
"In the Gulf War, we were working away at this,
but the information technology was not there. Now the
information technology has improved."
Noting the success in Afghanistan of Predator drones
and special forces on the ground, designating targets
with lasers and calling in air strikes on precise coordinates,
Jumper said, "Now we have varieties of ways to
put eyeballs on or unmanned sensors on targets and
stare at [the targets]--gather information about trends
and habits [and] pick the time and place of our choosing
to attack in ways we never had before."
These trends "make us more deadly," Jumper
asserted.
Asked how confident he is that USAF would fare better
now than in 1991 in the hunt for mobile Scud missiles,
Jumper simply replied, "Very."
Next Sensor-to-Shooter Links
USAF is already working on next- generation concepts
that will directly and digitally feed coordinates from
sensors to shooters without the need for some person
to "fat-finger" numbers onto a keypad, Jumper
observed.
"This next generation ... will really make the
difference, where we learn to make our platforms--space,
manned, and unmanned--perform at the digital level
with digital-level conversations that resolve these
ambiguities of target location and target identification." Fond
of describing the various intelligence, surveillance,
and reconnaissance communities within the Air Force
as "tribes" that use their own hieroglyphs
to communicate with each other, Jumper said the next
generation of sensor-to-shooter technology will do
away with the "tribal interpretations that now
have to happen when humans get in the loop."

USAF Chief of Staff John Jumper addresses members of the 319th Air Expeditionary
Group deployed for Enduring Freedom. (USAF photo by TSgt. Mark Bucher)
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F-22 and Access
Faced with yet another Pentagon review of the need
for the F-22, Jumper said he's confident the program
will stand up to the scrutiny intact, especially since
it has taken on new missions.
"The air-to-air piece [of the F-22 mission] is
probably less than half of what we are going to count
on the F-22 to do. Fifty-one percent, at least, is
going to be to take care of this most dangerous part
of what I call the anti-access mission." The F-22
will swoop in at "greater than 1.5 Mach in military
power" to swiftly eliminate modern, advanced surface-to-air
threats that would keep unstealthy, slower aircraft
away from the theater of operations. It will carry
the precision guided 250-pound Small Diameter Bomb.
"It will be carried internally on the F-22--probably
eight of [the SDBs], depending on the design. And [the
F-22] will glide out there in the 40- to 50-mile range
and take care of these most difficult threats that
challenge our ability to get weapons onto targets and,
as part of the Global Strike Task Force, will team
with the other stealth and standoff assets of the Air
Force and the other services to create the conditions
for access in those places where access might otherwise
be denied.
"It is this combination of air-to-air and air-to-ground
in the F-22--which is an airplane that does things
no other airplane will be able to do--that we think
is important, and we will continue to make that case."
He added, "We get taken to task because we continue
to do very well in the wars that we have fought in
the past [with currently fielded technology], but that
is no guarantee for success in the future." The
Air Force, he said, believes it can buy 339 aircraft
with the funding it's being given for the program.
"That is the number that we agreed on" with
the Pentagon leadership.
"I am confident we have a strong case for the
F-22, as we have in the past. I am going to continue
to make it. ... It is necessary to the concepts that
we have put forward for the future of the Air Force."
Next-Generation Bomber?
"Depending on what we do for the next generation
of long-range strike ... and how quickly we need to
do it, we have certain variations of the F-22 we could
use to give us longer-range strike capability. All
of that is a possibility; no formal proposals of that
are out there yet."
Jumper said he would not even call the next-generation
long-range strike platform a "next-generation
bomber. ... I am not sure if the thing needs to be
an orbital thing, a manned thing, or an unmanned thing."
F-22 Testing
Mathematical projections indicate that the F-22 might
be prone to "tip-flow separation" and "vortex
impingement," two aerodynamic problems that buffet
the tail fins and force the rudder actuator to work
hard to keep the rudder in place, Jumper reported.
A similar problem manifested itself on the F/A-18 Super
Hornet.
"When I asked, 'What is the probability that
this would result in a catastrophic failure of the
tail?' The answer was, 'One times 10 to the minus six
over the eight-thousand-hour life of an airplane,'" he
said.
"And we've never actually experienced one of
these test points yet, but the mathematics tell us
that when you extrapolate, this phenomenon has this
remote possibility of taking place."
Jumper said there are several possible solutions--including
a stealthy wing fence or a change to the rudder or
actuator--but they are still being developed.
"I am not going to trivialize this problem, but
I think that we have enough experience with this type
of problem that we will be able to pivot off of what
we learned from the F-18. Actually, the F-15 went through
some of this, too. We'll be able to deal with this
and hopefully save ourselves problems on the Joint
Strike Fighter."
Jumper said he believes the problem can be solved "without
... an adverse impact on the testing program, but I
am going to withhold that judgment until I see what
those fixes are and I hear what the engineers tell
me."
War on Terror
"It is a marathon, not a sprint. The Air Force,
along with everyone else, the other services, are gearing
up for having to deal with pursuit of terrorists over
the long term. ... We have to configure ourselves ...
to be able to respond to these threats as they emerge.
...
"For lift, for tankers, for personnel, for optempo,
rotational forces, we have to set ourselves up so that
we can respond to these things on a continuous basis."
Leasing New Tankers
USAF has "flown about 15,000 tanker sorties since
the 11th of September on airplanes that generally came
in about the Eisenhower Administration." Jumper
said most of these airplanes, the KC-135Es and KC-135Rs, "are
facing extended periods of time in the repair cycle.
These repairs that used to take six or eight months
are now taking more than 400 days to complete, and
it is costing us a whole lot of money. We are trying
to avoid that, if we possibly can."
The Air Force is looking into acquiring new Boeing
767s to replace the oldest KC-135s, either through
a procurement or lease. Jumper was asked whether a
lease would be paid for out of procurement or operating
funds.
"We don't have a lease deal yet. ... We've been
authorized to go pursue a deal. ... We are still negotiating," he
said.
"The common misperception is that these O&M
[Operation and Maintenance] funds are entirely at the
discretion of people like me, and somehow in the dark
of night, we can go broker a deal that passes nobody's
scrutiny but our own. In this day and age that is a
ridiculous notion. We have to go back to the [Congressional]
committees. We have to make sure that I carry out my
responsibility to the taxpayer to make sure we are
doing the right thing with the taxpayers' money." Jumper
said the Air Force will not go "around" Congress
to do business.
The Air Force doesn't have a solid plan yet in part
because the possibility of getting new tankers "came
up earlier than we had anticipated it would."
"We didn't just wake up in the morning and say
we need some tankers. ... We are about to spend a lot
of money on this last group of very old tankers. We
are trying to avoid that, and that is why this potential
for a lease was so attractive, in getting something
on the ramp quickly."
Electronic Warfare Options
Since an analysis of alternatives on replacing the
joint Air Force-Navy EA-6B escort jammer fleet was
completed in December, "the whole notion of electronic
warfare has, in my mind, changed" and can be accomplished
in "a variety of ways," Jumper said.
"One of them is certainly the sort of standoff
jamming that the EA-6 provides. But there are other
elements of network warfare--of expendable jammers,
of towed decoys, and other things--that go into helping
you solve this problem. ...
"Our position has been--and nobody disagrees
with this--that we ought to back off and take a look
at the whole chain before we decide that the single-point
solution to this problem is to replace the EA-6B."
Jumper said the Air Force and Navy are examining "a
variety of solutions that go at this in a different
way." In a situation that is "less permissive" than
Afghanistan, for example, "you are looking at
something that has to persist for a long period of
time, be able to stand off at longer ranges, have more
power, etc." ...
"What we have to work on ... between us [the
Air Force and the Navy] is this notion of being able
to run with the pack and to be able to persist. It
is hard to get one airplane to do both things. ...
We are working with the Navy on how we can split up
the areas of responsibility."
A so-called EA-22, or an electronic attack version
of the F-22, is probably not in the cards, Jumper said.
"That was a thing that was looked at as part
of this [analysis of a] replacement for the EA-6B,
but I for one don't think that is the right solution.
I think we need something that can sit and loiter and
stand off and have the power to bash electrons harder
from longer standoff ranges." The EA-22 is "a
possibility, but not one that I favor, at least right
now, from what I know."
Stepping Up Precision Munitions
"We all know that precision munitions are a very
big part of what we all do today. Everyone agrees that
we have to have adequate inventories of both laser-guided
and GPS-aided munitions."
Noting that GPS-aided bombs such as the Joint Direct
Attack Munition "bomb locations and not targets," since
they fly to coordinates and do not seek specific objects,
Jumper said the Air Force is "working on the kind
of weapons that will give us precision in and under
the weather." So far, "the laser spot is
the only way we have ... to put a spot on a target
and make sure that the weapon will hit the target."
The Air Force and Navy are stepping up production "of
both laser and GPS-guided munitions so that we will
ensure that we have adequate stocks of these things.
This buildup of capacity is going to take place between
now and the summer of '03, to work our way up to the
levels we need to be able to surge in situations like
we had in Kosovo and Afghanistan. ... We have decided
that the capacity has to be up around 2,500 to 3,000
a month ... of JDAM kits."
War Room of the Future
The Combined Air Operations Center has proved itself
in war and work is being done to make the concept into
a weapon system, Jumper said. He has said previously
that CAOCs will be standardized, and those in them
will have to pass check rides in their areas of operations.
Asked whether the US would be hamstrung by not being
allowed to use the CAOC at Prince Sultan Air Base in
Saudi Arabia, Jumper said the CAOC is a mobile thing.
"We can put the joint force air component commander
both at sea or on shore. We practice that, and we have
gained this flexibility, in cooperation with the Navy,
to be able to combine a forward presence, either ashore
or afloat, with reachback capability. ... You put the
databases and the computational stuff back on the shore
so you don't have to carry all that on the ship. You
put a few people on the ship and a lot of people in
the background."
For the future, Jumper envisions a "virtual" CAOC.
"I don't want to imply we have this yet, but
this is what we are developing in our advanced AOC
model. Essentially, you have a picture of the AOC floor
the way it would look if you were all in one place
and you're establishing hotline, intercom-type communications
with somebody on the other side of the room, but that
person may really be in a reachback position, thousands
of miles away."
The CAOC at Prince Sultan could be "replicated
elsewhere," Jumper said. It could be "backed
up by another CAOC right there in the area somewhere."
On Transformation
"What is transformational and revolutionary is
the fact that our [troops] can take the open-ended
information technology that is out there and put the
chess pieces together in ways that were never combined
before to create new types of effects."
Jumper noted that B-52s were never intended to perform
close air support but have done just that in Afghanistan,
dropping JDAMs on request by troops in the field.
"Close air support is now profoundly different
than the [old] image that you have to have an A-10,
[which] has got to be close to the ground [and] being
shot at, and the pilot had better be at great risk
before it counts."
Similarly, the F-22 was designed to sweep the skies
of enemy fighters, said Jumper, as "a replacement
for the F-15, ... white-scarf-in-the-breeze fighter
pilot stuff." However, "we are going to put
bombs on it, and it is going to be a more accurate
bomber than any current-generation bomber that we have,
with increases in capability."
The F-22 will have "information technology that
vacuums up information from 360 degrees and displays
on your cockpit an integrated picture of things that
don't just depend on the radar but other sensors that
are on the airplane and other airplanes ... data-linked
to it to give you a very comprehensive picture of what
your threat is."
How different that is, he said, from the F-117s over
Baghdad in 1991, with no protection other than stealth.
That F-117 pilot had "no indication in the cockpit
of what is looking at him and how much danger he is
in, but he sees missiles lifting off rails ... coming
his way, and all he can do is sit there and be as small
a dot as he can possibly be. That is courage."
The coming integration and digital fusing of "manned
and unmanned platforms will give us a degree of situational
awareness that you can't even imagine."

Jumper and Secretary of the Air Force James G. Roche testify before a
congressional panel. (USAF photo by TSgt. Jim Varhegyi)
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Stresses on the Force
The Air Force's intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance
assets "were purchased in size for the ... peacetime
routine and when we step up our pace of activity ...
then these assets become what we call high-demand,
low-density." He named the U-2, Rivet Joint, Joint
STARS, AWACS, and Predator UAV among the most highly
taxed systems.
"None of this is new news, and we would be stressed
no matter what scenario we had to respond to."
Nevertheless, "our effectiveness is well up over
what it was in 1990. I think we could do what the nation
asks us to do, and it is just going to be a matter
of how much more we ask the forces--that are already
heavily engaged--to do, on top of what they are doing
now and how long we ask them to do it. That part is
the risk."
Old Fighters, Skillfully Employed
Jumper acknowledged there will be a longer gap than
expected in transitioning from the 1980s generation
of fighters--F-15s and F-16s--to the next generation
of F-22s and F-35s. How will the Air Force bridge the
gap?
"What we've done is upgrade the technology in
the radars and the missiles and the electronics, and
in certain cases, like in the F-16, done things to
mitigate the bulkhead cracks and the other fatigue-related
issues that come up over time."
He later told Air Force Magazine that the service
will "have to accept a higher degree of risk.
The time is coming very soon when we will have to decide
whether to SLEP [perform a Service Life Extension Program]
our fighters or forego that and wait for the new aircraft.
My gut tells me we will tough it out, but it all depends
on these new aircraft coming in at the time we expect
them."
Jumper said there are "two differences between
us and the bad guys" that will enable the Air
Force to wait a little longer for the next fighters. "One
is the continuing improvements in electronics we've
been able to sustain. And the second is our training.
And as a matter of fact, I would put training first.
The people that we have flying these airplanes are
beyond doubt the very best in the world because one
of the things we have not compromised on is the quality
of our training. ...
"We are trying to make sure with the F-22 that
we keep up with the technological lead the same way
we've kept up with the training."
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