Boosting Pacific
Force Structure
The portion of USAF forces deployed to bases
in the Pacific region may increase under proposals being spearheaded
by Gen. William
J. Begert, commander of Pacific Air Forces.
Begert, who spoke in January with defense
reporters in Washington, D.C., said he believes that continuing tensions
between North and South Korea and between China and
Taiwan, as well
as the ongoing war
on terrorism, require a major reassessment of the allocation
of forces. In his view, the Air Forcealong with other branches
of the US militaryshould
shift more forces to the Pacific.
Begert said component commanders in the region have
briefed Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on a way ahead
in the Pacific that gives us the basing and access ... and lash-ups
with our allies and
friends that we need.
Begert said the briefings took place over a period of months and
had been conducted very close hold in terms of specifics. That
gave the US an opportunity to consult US allies and
friends in the region before carrying out any major changes.
He emphasized that no final decisions had been made
yet.
He also noted that talks were under way with South
Korea and Japan to prevent any unpleasant surprises and
to make certain the force shifts are practical.
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| An F-16 flies over Guam. Is it time to send more? |
Begert is pushing for a permanent or rotational complement
of bombers and other aircraft at Andersen AB, Guam.
Currently, the base has no permanently assigned aircraft;
instead, it serves as
a staging facility for transiting aircraft and forces. Begert
maintains that the islands proximity to regional hot spots1,500
miles both from the Taiwan Strait and from Koreaand the fact
that the air base, over the last decade, has been maintained and upgraded,
make it ideal
as a center of airpower projection.
Its a huge base structure, very capable, he said. Weve
invested very heavily in Guam over the past 10 years
or so. ... The capacity of the base to either absorb airplanes stationed
there or airplanes that
pass through is really very, very good.
During Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan,
Begert said, the base went from having no airplanes on the
ground to literally 75 airplanes on the ground ... within 48 hours
and never missed a beat. Moreover,
he added, its US territory.
One approach might be to rotate a mix of bombers
at the base, Begert said, noting that B-1Bs and B-52s
were stationed there during Gulf War II and the deployment
... went very, very smoothly. In
addition, he said, the island offers a good training
range.
Thats particularly important for the future, Begert said, for
aircraft such as the F/A-22. At Guam, you can go supersonic and
do supersonic cruise and the other things you need, he explained,
adding that there is also both air-to-air and air-to-ground training
capability available.
Begert acknowledged that any move to the Pacific
would be somewhat remedial, in that US forces in
Asia downsized dramatically 10
years ago. On top of that, PACAF had some pretty painful reductions over
the past year or so, he said. And there could be
additional cuts coming. Its
something I worry about, he said.
We need to keep what we have and see what we can do to
enhance what we have in terms of capabilities, emphasized
Begert. He said that any increase need not be permanent, pointing
out that the
US has asked forand been granted with little prompting of
the host nationstemporary basing rights throughout the region.
A common caveat has been to refrain from publicizing the endeavors.
Were able to go in and move force structure in there for
a particular operation, then we move out, said Begert. Weve
had very good success in Asia on getting access to the bases that we
need.
Hurry Up With Those F/A-22s
Begert expressed concern about the age of PACAFs F-15 Eagles
based at Kadena AB, Japan. These 1970s-vintage aircraft, he said, are
beginning
to suffer serious age-related deterioration,
and maintenance crews are losing the battle to keep them up to par.
We set a standard of 79 percent in-commission rate, and
they havent met that, come September, [in] four years, said
Begert. They were down to 70 percent last year.
He said there is no single cause of these aircraft
problems, making predictions next to impossible.
Its a variety of issues that you find with aging airplanes, said
Begert. He cited wiring bundles that corrode or turn
to dust and structural
issues. Kadena has 48 airplanes, and, out of those,
he said, structural failure caused five to require new wings
last year. In some of the F-15s,
the vertical tail assembly had to be replaced.
In others, canopy seals failed, leading to pressurization
problems.
Begert said, Its just one thing after another.
Budget Request Tops $400 Billion
President Bush on Feb. 2 presented to Congress
a $401.7 billion defense budget for Fiscal
2005. If enacted, it would raise defense
budget authority in real terms for the seventh
year in a row. A companion
future-years plan calls for an increase of
about $20 billion annually through 2009.
The Bush Administration projects that years defense
budget would be $487.7 billion.
Air Force budget authority came to $120.5
billion, an increase of nearly $10 billion
over 2004. However, a senior defense official
told reporters that most of that increase
is pass through money,
meaning it will go to space and other accounts
that provide defense-wide capabilities. The Navy/Marine
Corps budget received a $4.2 billion boost
to $119.3 billion, while the Army budget
increased only $1.8 billion to $97.2 billion.
The new budget raises by about $13 billion
the funding for operation and maintenance
accounts, which finance flying hours, steaming
days, tank miles, and the like. Procurement,
however, would be virtually flat, at about
$75 billion, although some buying accounts
would get a substantial increase to replace
equipment and munitions expended during
operations over the last 30 months.
Investment in science and technology would
go to about $69 billion, but its share of
the defense budget would be unchanged.
Bomber Work Coming Together
The Air Force on Dec. 12 held a long-range
strike summit to begin work on a flight plan that
will guide the service as it searches for ways to supplement
or replace the existing bomber fleet.
The solution may be a manned or unmanned
aircraft or something thats
not an aircraft at all.
Officials have scrupulously avoided using
the term bomber, primarily
because the service has shifted toward capabilitiesor
effects-basedplanning
and away from platform-oriented planning.
They do not want to presuppose that the best solution to
the problem of long-range strike is necessarily
a traditional aircraft.
Service officials had planned to wait another
decade before starting research and development
for a bomber replacement. However, lawmakers
did not feel that was moving quickly enough,
so last fall Congress authorized $100 million
specifically to get the plan going.
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| After the B-2, what will come next? |
USAF directed the summit attendees to put
into like categories and time frames
all the programs, initiatives, technologies,
threats, and ideas pertaining to a
new bomber-like capability, said
Brig. Gen.
Stephen M. Goldfein, USAFs director of operational
capability requirements.
USAF has been pursuing a host of projects
that bear on long-range strike, Goldfein
told reporters at the Pentagon in January.
The summits goal was to discover what are the
common threads, he
said, adding that no decisions were made.
The summit was held too late to influence
the Fiscal 2005 budget, but the new flight
plan will help determine direction for long-range
strike in the 2006 budget. The plan is expected
to succeed the current Bomber Roadmap, released
in 2001.
According to the old Bomber Roadmap, the
Air Force should have a replacement for current
bombers by 2037, but, Goldfein said, the
service is reconsidering that date.
We know the age of the three bombers we have, he said. At
some point, we have to start thinking about replacing them.
There have been a multitude of initiativesstudies driven by the
Pentagon, Congress, and the Air Forcethat have attempted
to answer a host of fairly specific questions, said
Goldfein, about threats and capabilities that will emerge
in various windows from now
through 2050. Various options presented in
those studies ranged from aircraft and hypersonics to directed
energy, stealth, munitions and network-centric
operations.
The summit made some apples to apples comparisons
about needs, capabilities, and timing. For
instance, one of the driving factors for
any long-range strike capability, said Goldfein,
is the ability to
penetrate to survive. He was talking about potential
adversary air defenses that likely will feature new surface-to-air
missiles. Although
new SAMs may proliferate more slowly than
previously expected, he noted, they will become more widespread
and numerous in the coming years.
Goldfein expects the summit to trigger a
new analysis of alternatives, one that will
be focused on near-term operational utility.
The Air Force leadership wants very much
to say, Heres a path to
the next long-range strike capability, Goldfein
said. Weve
studied this to death.
Plans called for an announcement soon.
Not HypersonicYet
In the near future, the Air Force is not
likely to pursue hypersonics for a long-range
strike platform, said Gen. T. Michael Moseley,
Air Force vice chief of staff. Speaking at a defense conference in January,
Moseley said the Air Force should not fixate
on an exoatmospheric hypersonic craft
today because the technology is not yet mature
and wont be anytime
soon. He specifically noted that much more
work needs to be done on finding vehicle skin materials
that can withstand the high-altitude, high-temperature rigors
of the mission.
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| Hypersonic vehicles are
still a ways off. |
Moseley believes that research should continue
into hypersonic technology and that it will
eventually be useful. However, he told attendees
at the precision strike conference hosted
by the National Defense Industrial
Association, he is skeptical about following
the course posed by some industry officials,
who urge betting big on near-term use of
the technology. Moseley doubts that a huge
infusion of money will suddenly advance the
state of the art.
Instead, Moseley said, he would like to see
incremental upgrades of existing fighters
and bombers, along with improvements in stealth
and electronic warfare.
Hed also like to see development
of a complementary portfolio of assets, such
as unmanned combat aerial vehicles and new standoff weapons.
The biggest payoff in strike systems in the
last few years, he said, has been in giving
attack assets persistence over the target, rather
than additional speed.
New Multisensor Aircraft in Danger
The Air Force has been fighting hard since
early December to keep intact its E-10 Multisensor
Command and Control Aircraft project, despite
budgetary pressures and outright
opposition from key Pentagon
officials.
In the budget wars, the E-10 is squaring
off against the Space Based Radar. The E-10,
which is to be based on the Boeing 767 airframe,
is intended to eventually replace the E-8
Joint STARS ground radar airplane, E-3 AWACS
air battle control aircraft, and the RC-135
Rivet Joint signals intelligence airplane.
The chief E-10 opponent seems to be Stephen
A. Cambone, undersecretary of defense for
intelligence. Cambone has questioned the
pace of the project and whether USAF has
proper authority to pursue it.
Cambone also thinks it might duplicate the
capability to be provided by the Space Based
Radar. The primary function of both systems
will be to perform the ground moving target
mission now carried out by Joint STARS.
The Air Force has argued that the $5.3 billion
E-10 will have ground resolution 12 times
better than what will be seen in early versions
of the $7 billion SBR and that it will be
available sooner. Moreover, the E-10 will
be able to stay in the battle area
indefinitely, while the SBRexpected to be a low Earth
orbit systeminitially will have
only a brief capability over any one area.
It will take a large constellation of SBR satellites before
the system can provide nonstop coverage.
The trump card for the Air Force, however,
is the E-10s power to
spot and track low-flying cruise missiles,
which some defense analysts consider an emerging threat
soon to be on a par with weapons of mass destruction.
The SBR will lack the resolution to play
much of a role in cruise missile detection or tracking.
Cambone wants the SBR as a cornerstone of
what he has called universal
situational awareness and prefers the satellite because
it requires no forward-based footprint overseas.
He has also complained to acting Pentagon acquisition chief
Michael W. Wynne that the Air Force
has exceeded its authority to develop the
airplane. The project started out as simply a radar upgrade
for the Joint STARS.
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| Cambone: Space Based Radar is the key. |
Cambones case was recently bolstered by Dov S. Zakheim, the Pentagons
comptroller and top budget official, who
told reporters in December that he doesnt expect cruise missile
defense to become a big-ticket program or concern for some
time.
Cruise missiles in the hands of terrorists,
said Zakheim, would assume the ability to seize a
ship, configure it with a cruise missile, ... target the
missile, ... [and] put in the right mapping information
to hit the US, a scenario which he says strains credibility
just now.
The E-10 projects chief proponent is Gen. John P. Jumper, USAF
Chief of Staff. Jumper has championed the effort since announcing it
in February
2001. He sees it as a way to build greater
battlefield awareness and better information networks, as well as a
mobile air operations center that could
go anywhere in the world.
Most of the E-10 work has been divided up
between Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop
Grumman, and Raytheon. A contract to develop
the last piece of the projectthe battle management
systemis
expected to be awarded this spring.
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