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The Pentagon's Quadrennial
Defense Review, working toward a statutory deadline
of Sept. 30, will place heavy emphasis on long-range
precision strike systems to help gain quick control
of a future military crisis and serve as a wedge for
other forces to get into the fight. It will echo the
Air Force's own proposals in this regard.
The QDR, however, is unlikely to provide a blueprint
for expanding the manned bomber force. Plans called
for the Defense Department to emphasize radically smaller,
more-precise munitions plus greater reliability and
availability of existing aircraft and not the procurement
of new aircraft.
The new munitions will, in fact, multiply the capabilities
of the bomber fleet. In the near future, a B-2 stealth
bomber will be able to achieve on one mission the same
effects that it took six missions to achieve during
Operation Allied Force. And even better weapons already
in development could increase each bomber's effectiveness
20-fold, enabling them to precisely strike hundreds
of targets per sortie.
The enhancement of aircraft reliability, coupled with
improved survival systems, will expand a bomber's maximum
number of sorties, further increasing the effects bombers
can achieve without the addition of new airplanes.
The Air Force, reflecting this direction, actually
has proposed reducing the size of its bomber fleet,
asserting that it prefers to invest the savings in
munitions and improvements to the remaining bombers.
This, it is said, will increase their readiness and
the range of weapons they can employ.
The multiplication of capability should sharply increase
the tempo of a future air campaign.
Missing Successor
However,
the Air Force still has produced no plan for a successor
to USAF's existing bombers, many of which are quite
old and will need to be replaced sooner than previously
expected. The service is sticking to its notion, voiced
in the 1999 Bomber Roadmap, that it can defer work
on a follow-on system until the mid2010s--fielding
replacements in the late 2030s. By then, however, the
fleet will have undergone a steep decline, as airframes
wear out or are lost to attrition.
Because of the impending problems facing the bomber
force, some have suggested the existence of a classified
program of some sort, one which could soon emerge to
take over some of the long-range mission. However,
there seem to be no budget placeholders for such a
program.
USAF's proposed B-1B cut would shrink the fleet from
93 to only 60 aircraft. The plan hit immediate resistance.
Senior members of Congress blasted the move as both
militarily unsound and politically motivated. Spurred
by the potential loss of jobs in their home districts,
as well as concern that the Air Force would be getting
rid of needed capability, the Congressmen insisted
on further study before action is taken.
As a result, the B-1B drawdown is on hold, though
the Air Force had intended to put it into effect on
Oct. 1.
Some lawmakers focused on the argument that the Air
Force should be increasing the size of the bomber force,
not cutting it, and promised budgetary amendments that
might oblige USAF to invest in a new global strike
platform earlier than called for in service plans.
Since the Bush Administration came into office this
year, long-range airpower has been considered a rising
priority in the Pentagon. The Administration's suggestion
of a possible shift of military focus to Asia and the
Pacific, coupled with its desire to reduce overseas
deployments and act with greater speed in a military
crisis, implied that the required bomber fleet, set
at 190 airframes in the 1997 QDR, would be expanded.
In setting the new QDR's "Terms of Reference"-that
is, ground rules and definitions for the exercise-Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld named 13 investment priorities.
Prominent among them was precision strike.
Rumsfeld instructed the services to favor "long-range
platforms that can strike rapidly ... carrying larger
payloads of weapons," from the air, sea, and space.
He specified that the military will increasingly demand
stealthy "long-range aerial platforms capable
of penetrating enemy air defenses" as adversaries
develop the means to deny the US entry to overseas
theaters of war.
Quickly defeating these anti-access systems--such
as weapons of mass destruction, improved air defenses,
and tactical ballistic missiles--may even be undertaken
from "suborbital space vehicles" that may
prove "valuable for conducting rapid global strikes," Rumsfeld
wrote. He also directed an emphasis on developing more
precise and smaller standoff weapons, able to attack
in all weather and some able to loiter over the battlefield,
striking mobile targets.
The Naturals
Bombers seemed to be a natural for these missions,
given that the combination of their long range and
heavy payload offered the exact capability needed to
attack at globe-spanning distances. Also, they would
require less aerial tanker support than would be the
case with fighters, and they would also have the capability
to function without forward operating bases.
The Terms of Reference guidance reflected President
Bush's own pointed-though perfunctory-remarks on the
shape of the future military. In a May commencement
address at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.,
Bush said he was committed to building a force "defined
less by size and more by mobility and swiftness, ...
one that relies more heavily on stealth, precision
weaponry, and information technologies." Such
an approach, he said, would help redefine war "on
our terms."
To inform his own decisions on both strategy and spending
and to identify issues for the QDR to tackle, Rumsfeld
launched a series of studies. He used them to examine
current and future military threats, the condition
and direction of the US military, and places where
new funding would have the most dramatic results.
The first of these groups to publicly report its findings
was the Transformation Panel chaired by retired Air
Force Gen. James P. McCarthy. It pegged long-range
precision attack as one of six capabilities necessary
to quickly gain the upper hand in future crises. The
transformation group suggested that the US military
of the future should be able, within 24 hours, to "set
the conditions" of a conflict anywhere in the
world. After forces had accomplished this goal, follow-on
forces would enter a theater of war, "establish
control" of the situation within 96 hours, and
achieve "decisive resolution" to the conflict
within 30 days.
The discussion of gaining entry to a theater of war
and defeating anti-access threats dovetailed with the
Air Force's own strategic concept, Global Reconnaissance
Strike, and its execution derivative, Global Strike
Task Force. The two concepts call for stealthy bombers
and fast stealthy fighters to quickly destroy enemy
anti-access systems so that the rest of the military
can flow into the theater to conduct warfare on any
level deemed necessary to accomplish strategic objectives.
"Bomber-Centric" Force
Gen. Richard E. Hawley, retired former head of USAF's
Air Combat Command and a principal author of the initial
Global Reconnaissance Strike paper, followed up with
another paper in the spring 2001 Strategic Review.
In it, he said that the Air Force should swing "the
airpower pendulum" away from fighters and back
toward a more "bomber-centric" force. Bombers,
he said, require fewer pilots and less investment than
fighters to deliver the same number of munitions and
can reduce the strain on airlift and tanker assets
as well.
"A bomber-centric approach can deny an enemy
his anti-access objectives, attack his key strategic
infrastructure, slow or halt his forces, and beat down
his defenses while the other elements of the joint
force are safely built up in-theater," Hawley
wrote.
The Transformation Panel did not focus on bombers
to the exclusion of all other systems. Cruise missiles
launched from standoff platforms were also deemed crucial
in the early round of combat. With a bow to jointness,
the panelists called for more involvement of naval
forces to help protect forces entering the theater
and for insertions of a small number of ground forces.
Then came the report of the Conventional Forces Panel,
headed by David C. Gompert, president of Rand Europe.
This panel assessed the systems now in service or in
development and attempted to determine which were most
suited to the kinds of warfare anticipated in the early
decades of the 21st century.
Like the McCarthy panel, Gompert's group emphasized
the need for a "robust" long-range precision
strike capability as a prerequisite for any future
force. Upgrades to the B-2 and B-52 bombers, stealthy
standoff missiles, and miniaturized munitions were
among the few shooting capabilities that the panel
deemed most "highly compatible" with future
required capabilities. The panel suggested adding funds
to the bomber upgrade and munitions programs and, where
possible, accelerating them.
Underpinning the other panels was a study chaired
by the Pentagon's longtime director of the Office of
the Net Assessment, Andrew Marshall. The Marshall study
on military strategy remains highly classified but
is believed to concur with the other groups on the
need for fast-striking systems to nip future military
crises in the bud.
Leaving aside the proposed B-1B reduction, the Air
Force's bomber fleet today comprises 208 airplanes-21
B-2s, 93 B-1s, and 94 B-52Hs. However, the figure of
208 overstates by far the service's true bomber capability.
Of the 208 bombers in service, only 112 are deemed
mission ready; the remainder are dedicated to either
test and training functions or are considered part
of the attrition reserve. This latter designation is
conferred upon airplanes that receive no funding for
spare parts, training hours, or crews and get only
minimal maintenance attention.
The breakout is as follows:
- B-2 bombers, 21 total and 16 combat ready.
- B-1B bombers, 93 total and 52 combat ready (36
in the active force and 16 in the Air National Guard).
- B-52H bombers, 94 total and 44 combat ready (36
in the active force and eight in Air Force Reserve
Command).
The proposed elimination of 33 B-1Bs would take the
B-1B fleet down to just 60 airplanes, of which only
37 would be kept in combat-ready status. Thus, if USAF's
reduction goes through, the overall bomber fleet will
drop to 165 airplanes, of which only 89 would be ready
for action.
In announcing the planned reduction, Rumsfeld said
the Air Force requested it and that $130 million a
year in savings could be retained by the Air Force
and be plowed back into the bomber fleet to make the
remaining aircraft more capable.
$2 Billion Gap
Air Force Secretary James G. Roche told the Senate
Armed Services Committee in July that the bill to upgrade
all 93 B-1Bs to a configuration deemed sufficient to
keep the airplanes battle-worthy would cost $2 billion
more than the service had available for the task. He
added that the new Administration wants to avoid asking
for more money if there are ways to deliver the same
capability within the existing Air Force means.
The annual $130 million in savings, even extended
over a decade, still will not entirely make up the
shortfall in bomber modification funding, but, the
Air Force deputy assistant secretary for budget, Maj.
Gen. Larry W. Northington, said, "It's a pretty
good down payment to pay down the backlog." Much
of the money would have to go toward improving the
B-1B's defensive avionics suite and adding the ALE-50
towed decoy to all aircraft in the fleet.
In a statement, the Air Force said it could pay for
all planned modifications to the 60 remaining airframes
through 2007 using only the savings generated by retiring
the 33 bombers. A special team has been set up to determine
which airframes would be retired, since the B-1Bs are
all about the same age but have been used very differently.
In explaining the reduction, Northington noted, "We
have been unable to put the necessary modifications
in the aircraft to continue to keep it viable in a
combat situation. Offensive avionics, defensive avionics,
weapon systems integration, electronics in general
are things that have caused substantial cost growth
and in fact degrade the aircraft's ability to perform
in a combat situation."
The retired airplanes would be stripped of useful
parts and sent to the boneyard. Absent a massive transfusion
of money, these aircraft would never be serviceable
again, Northington added. "We do not want to maintain
those airplanes. That's the whole idea," he said.
Cutting the fleet and winding up with a smaller but
more capable inventory is a move the Air Force has
been considering "for a couple of years," Northington
said. From an operational and logistics standpoint, "this
makes sense," he added.
Some of the savings will come from consolidating the
bomber's five current operating locations into only
two. The USAF Chief of Staff, Gen. Michael E. Ryan,
told the Senate panel that, in the Cold War, wide dispersal
of the bomber fleet made sense because the US needed
to reduce its vulnerability to a surprise sea-launched
ballistic missile attack. Now that the Cold War is
but a memory, he said, it no longer makes sense to
continue with the inefficiencies of a dispersed fleet.
It was the prospect of some bases losing the bomber
mission that galvanized Congressional opposition to
the plan, even though Roche and Ryan said a mitigation
plan will find other tasks for the Guardsmen affected
by the B-1 reduction.
Fading
B-2 Prospects?
The B-1B announcement also chilled speculation that
the Pentagon would restart the B-2 production line,
a prospect that had seemed to gain momentum with the
nomination of Roche, a Northrop Grumman executive,
as Air Force Secretary.
In May, Northrop Grumman made an unsolicited offer
to the Pentagon to reopen the B-2 production line and
deliver 40 new stealth bombers at a total cost of $29.4
billion. The airplanes, which would be called B-2C
(the C is for conventional) would be cheaper than their
elder brethren because much of the expensive equipment
necessary only for the nuclear attack role--such as
hardening against electromagnetic pulse--would be deleted.
In a letter to Rumsfeld, Northrop Grumman Chief Executive
Officer Kent Kresa said he could reopen the B-2 line
and get production under way in 2003. The B-2 would
remain "essentially unchanged" aerodynamically--saving
money by eliminating substantial test and development
costs vs. a new-design aircraft--but would enjoy modern
avionics and software and would be cheaper to operate
because its stealthy systems and surfaces would be
more modern and resilient. The 40 airplanes would be
delivered through 2016, at a rate of three or four
a year.
There was no money for renewed B-2 production in the
Bush Administration's amendments to the Fiscal 2002
budget, however, and the move to reduce the B-1B inventory
all but quashed any chance to add more stealth bombers.
"If we can't afford to keep the bombers we already
have, I don't see how we could pay for ... new ones," a
senior USAF official told reporters in Washington.
An advisor to Rumsfeld who participated in one of
the panels said he has found no one in the Administration
very high on the idea of restarting the B-2. "The
money's not there," he said. "And even if
it was ... if you were to start a new stealth bomber
today, [the B-2] is not how you would do it. Stealth
has evolved quite a bit over the last 20 years." The
advisor said the Bush Administration is looking for "something
new" that could serve as its "signature system."
A participant in one of the Rumsfeld panels said the
members of his group nearly recommended retiring all
B-1s, mostly because of their operational woes, chronic
maintenance problems, and vulnerability in many phases
of the mission. However, they did not want to send "the
wrong message" about long-range airpower, which
they felt was critical. Neither did they want to imply
that the US should buy more B-2s.
Long-Range Strike Assets
The Air Force's
long-range precision strike capability rests
with bombers and a number of new munitions
designed to be highly precise and/or stealthy
for farther reach into enemy territory.
The B-2A, B-1B,
and B-52H represent, respectively, USAF's ability
to penetrate tough air defenses, to attack
enemy forces when air defenses have been suppressed,
and to strike the enemy with standoff munitions.
Only the B-2 and the B-52 retain a nuclear
mission; the B-1Bs are limited to conventional
operations.
The Joint Direct
Attack Munition is an all-weather, satellite-guided
bomb. The 2,000-pound variant was employed
by the B-2 in Operation Allied Force with great
success. A 1,000-pound version is available
and a 500-pound version is being readied for
deployment. Both the B-1B and B-2 are configured
for the 2,000-pound JDAM. The B-52 will receive
the 500-pound version late this year and the
B-2 will receive it in 2004.
The Joint Standoff
Weapon is a stealthy, satellite-guided glide
bomb that can be released 40 miles away from
its target. Initial versions are submunitions
dispensers; later versions have a unitary warhead.
The B-2 will receive JSOW certification late
this year, the B-52 in 2002, and the B-1B in
2004.
The Conventional
Air Launched Cruise Missile is a satellite-guided
missile converted from stocks of nuclear-armed
cruise missiles. Range is given at 600 miles.
A precision version is in development; only
the B-52 can carry the conventional cruise
missile.
The Joint Air-to-Surface
Standoff Missile is a highly stealthy cruise
missile with a range in excess of 150 miles.
The B-52 will receive JASSM in 2003, and the
B-1 and B-2 will receive it in 2004. The JASSM
will also be carried on fighters and is the
planned replacement for CALCM, which is only
available in limited qualitites.
The Wind-Corrected
Munitions Dispenser is a smart guidance kit
that can be applied to existing dispenser weapons,
such as the tank-killing Sensor Fuzed Weapon.
It allows the bomber to veer away from the
target area immediately after weapon release
and corrects the munitions flight path for
windage automatically. The B-52 will receive
WCMD this year and the B-1B in 2003.
The Small Diameter
Bomb will have the precision necessary to achieve
the effects of a 2,000-pound bomb with a 250-pound
bomb. In-service dates are still being developed,
but SDB will likely begin entering the inventory
in 2007. |
In Defense of the B-1
Scott White, Boeing's program manager for the B-1
and B-2, on which the company is a subcontractor to
Northrop Grumman, said the B-1 has acquired a bad reputation
for technical problems, but he argued that these are
not inherent faults of the airplane itself.
"The B-1 has, over the years, been unfairly characterized
and limited by what it is allowed to do," he said.
Under terms of the START I treaty, White noted, B-1Bs
are not permitted to carry cruise missiles or external
stores-they could carry 50,000 pounds of munitions
on external racks-which weighs against the B-1 when
competing against the B-52 for the mission of employing
standoff weapons.
White acknowledged, however, that the B-1B "can't
go over Baghdad with immunity" but was "never
supposed to have the survivability in the high-threat
region."
The B-1 can do missions beyond the way it is now employed, "but
somebody negotiated that capability away," he
said. "To characterize the B-1 as not being able
to do certain things is not allowing the B-1 to compete
on a level playing field."
White also noted that the Air Force has chronically
shortchanged the B-1 when it comes to spare parts,
maintenance, and staffing, and the result is mission
capable rates hovering just above 50 percent. Gen.
John Michael Loh, a retired former head of Air Combat
Command, said in a July 5 letter to the Los Angeles
Times that "the Air Force demonstrated in 1993
to the satisfaction of a critical Congress that the
B-1 could exceed all bomber standards for readiness
and reliability if, like any other weapon system, it
had its full set of people and spare parts." The
1993 evaluation cleared the B-1B for a "$2.5 billion
conventional mission upgrade" that is still under
way.
Both
the McCarthy and Gompert studies emphatically promoted
the use of bombers in conjunction with the Small Diameter
Bomb, a weapon that will be able to achieve the effects
of a 2,000-pound warhead in a 250-pound munition, mainly
due to sharp improvements in accuracy.
The B-2--which was lauded as the star of Operation
Allied Force in the Balkans in 1999 and which typically
hit 15 aim points or better on each mission with 2,000-pound
Joint Direct Attack Munitions--will be able to carry
more than 300 SDBs, according to the Air Force's program
executive officer for weapons, Joseph G. Diamond.
Diamond reported that the SDB will go first on the
F-15E and F-16 but will eventually be made available
for most of the bomb-dropping aircraft in the Air Force.
A "smart rack" will also be developed to
carry the munitions, whose aim points can be updated
after release to the point of impact.
The SDB comes into the inventory beginning in 2007,
Diamond said, but a Phase 2 version of the weapon will
come along just two years later, with a terminal seeker
and the ability to hunt down mobile targets within
a prescribed area. The unit will likely have a motor
and wings for more range and employ either laser radar
or millimeter-wave radar seeker technology, along with
Global Positioning System and inertial navigation.
The projected SDB buy is 12,000 munitions and 2,000
smart racks to hold them.
A major increase in bomber capability will already
be long in service by then, Diamond noted. The B-2
is scheduled to receive in 2004 the first versions
of the smaller 500-pound JDAM, which will give the
stealth bomber the power to hit 84 aim points on a
single mission, in all weather, and with accuracy to
within 10 feet of the target.
McCarthy, in an interview with Air Force Magazine,
said the SDB is a critical part of the overall bomber
concept.
"You're talking about being able to do a decisive
attack, meaning precision and a large number of weapons," he
said, adding that its effects would be mass combined
with speed and "mass in a different definition
than we've used in the past."
"Awesome" Package
At a press conference explaining the Transformation
Panel's findings, McCarthy noted, "You can put
324 of the Small Diameter Bombs on each B-2. If you
launch 18 of the 21 B-2s, that's 5,824 individually
targeted weapons on that small force." In conjunction
with Conventional Air Launched Cruise Missiles and
expanded B-52 launch capability, he added, "You're
talking about 8,000 to 10,000 weapons in a single strike
package, which is pretty awesome."
The Transformation Panel did not have time to weigh
the issues surrounding what type of system might succeed
the B-2 and the rest of the bomber force, McCarthy
said in the Air Force Magazine interview. However,
he added, "We felt that there is a need for further
study in this particular area, which would involve
a variety of different possibilities, ranging from
more B-2s to manned or unmanned new aircraft to space-based
capabilities."
McCarthy said flatly that the Air Force should begin
work on a follow-on system much sooner than 2017, as
now called for in Air Force plans. "We think you
ought to start this process right now," he asserted. "That
doesn't mean you start bending metal" immediately,
however. He added that the platform itself is only
part of the picture and that "it's the entire
infrastructure and support mechanism."
McCarthy suggested that the Air Force should have
bombers sitting on conventional alert much as they
sat on nuclear alert in the Cold War years. In a crisis,
they could take off and fly to a preset launch area
and receive targeting information en route. Such a
capability would be "a very rapid, credible response
force that can go anyplace in the world, and that has
a deterrent capability in itself," McCarthy said.
The
Transformation Panel also urged the Pentagon to begin
work right away on long-range conventional cruise missiles,
possibly a common type that could be used by bombers
as well as ships and submarines.
The Big Leap
Ryan, in an interview with Air Force Magazine, said
the service isn't interested in buying more B-2s because
it lacks the funding to buy them or support them. Even
so, USAF wants to make a big leap in capability with
its next strategic system, Ryan said, and the technology
has not yet arrived to do that.
"We need to go to the next level of strike capability,
beyond the B-2," he asserted. "And I'm not
sure what that is, but it's long range, it's fast,
and it's precision and survivable. Whether that's manned,
unmanned, orbital, suborbital, or hypersonic, I don't
know, but I think that it is not in the current fleet
that's out there right now."
Asked what field of basic research seems to hold the
most promise for a bomber follow-on, Ryan said, "I'm
not sure it's hypersonics yet, because we haven't yet
been able to mitigate the effects of drag at hypersonic
velocities." Work continues on ablative surfaces "that
allow us to operate at those frictional temperatures," he
added, "but we haven't got solutions to those
yet." However, the Chief of Staff did say that
a suborbital system "may be closer." Such
a system would "transit" the hypersonic realm
but not persist there.
"Orbital is another area we continue to look
into," Ryan added. "There are huge policy
issues about being on orbit with weapons," but
USAF will continue to examine the technology to determine
its promise, he said.
Ryan
acknowledged the existence of a little-known program
called the common aerospace vehicle, which he described
as "more a concept than an actual article." The
system would be carried aboard a space maneuver vehicle,
itself carried to orbit by a rocket or reusable launch
vehicle. Once on orbit, it would remain there until
called on to act, but how it might attack ground targets
is not yet clear, Ryan said.
No one seriously questions that a new bomber-or something-eventually
will be necessary. The youngest B-52H in the fleet
will be 40 years old next year, and while the Air Force
has said the venerable bomber could continue for another
40 years, service officials privately say such a plan
is unrealistic. Corrosion and other unexpected problems
are already playing havoc with the KC-135, which is
of a similar vintage.
The B-1B was designed for about a 30-year service
life and so will have to be replaced entirely beginning
around 2015. Even the B-2, which is the newest bomber
in the inventory, is seen as needing to retire starting
around 2024. The B-52s are projected to give out around
2037. To have a replacement strike platform ready by
then, USAF expects to start work on a program circa
2017.
McCarthy, at his press briefing, said the next bomber-type
system could be an unmanned aircraft, a jetliner loaded
with cruise missiles, or something "from space." However,
he said, work should begin right away, and the new
system should be in hand "absolutely sooner than
2017."
It Takes One To B-1
In the Senate,
anger was running high over USAF's decision
to shut down B-1B operations in Georgia,
Kansas, and Idaho. James G. Roche, Secretary
of the Air Force, stepped before the Senate
Armed Services Committee on July 10, where
he encountered Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas,
who spoke on behalf of fellow Sens. Max Cleland
and Zell Miller of Georgia, Larry Craig and
Mike Crapo of Idaho, and Sam Brownback of
Kansas.
Roberts: Now
it's time to move to the B-1. Secretary Roche,
remember the old days when [former California
Republican Rep.] Bob Dornan was known as "B-1
Bob"?
(Laughter in audience)
Roche: Yes,
I've met the gentleman.
Roberts: Well,
now you've got B-1 Max, B-1 Larry, B-1 Mike,
B-1 Zell, B-1 Sam, and B-1 Pat. |
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