BUFFs and Bones
Heavy bombers, among the most successful
weapons in Gulf War II, are back in the spotlight. There are concerns
about the fleets
size and longevity.
Two primary issues have surfaced. First, the Air
Force has decided to reconsider the question of putting
new engines in its venerable
B-52H bombers. USAF earlier had said no. Second, lawmakers
want the service to bring back some of the B-1B bombers
it just retired in a cost-saving
move.
Seven years ago, the Air Force considered the B-52 re-engining
option but dropped the idea as it retooled its long-range
bomber roadmap. At the time, officials thought putting
new power plants on the 41-year-old
bomber would cost too much when compared to marginal
gains in fuel efficiencies and reduced maintenance.
A recent Defense Science Board report recommended that
the Air Force take a second look at that earlier decision.
The DSB found that the service had underestimated the
maintenance savings that would
result from re-engining the BUFF fleet.
In its 1996 analysis, the Air Force had looked at replacing
the B-52s eight engines with four commercially derived turbofans.
Now, say service officials, there could be substantive
performance benefits from going to a newer eight-engine configuration
that would enable the
bomber to take off from shorter runways, climb faster,
and carry a heavier payload.
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| A B-52 and B-1Bsstars of the wars. |
The Air Force expects to complete a new re-engining study
effort and define the program cost sometime this fall.
Meanwhile, service officials are in a quandary about
the B-1B bomber. Two years ago, USAF announced the retirement
of 32 B-1Bs
to free up enough money to fund upgrades and spare parts
for the 60 remaining B-1Bs. Now, some or all may return
to active service.
Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.), chairman of the House
Armed Services Committee, inserted $20 million in the
Fiscal 2004 defense authorization
bill to start the process of bringing back to service
23 of those 32 B-1Bs. The measure passed the full House
on July 8.
The committee noted that the B-1B was crucial to the success
of recent combat operations. The panel further maintained that
long-range strike capabilities are critical when access
to overseas bases is limited or under political threat.
However, the Air Force dispatched only a handful of B-1Bs
to Operation Iraqi Freedom, and, while they performed
well, service officials said there was no need to use
all that were in the theater. Officials
also noted that $20 million is not nearly enough to support
the return of 23 aircraft. The Congressional action,
they added, would leave the
service with an unfunded mandate which could be fulfilled
only with additional appropriations totaling more than
a billion dollars.
The Senates version of the defense bill did not include a B-1B
buyback.
Rumsfeld Rethinks the Reserves
In early July, service leaders in Washington got orders
to rethink how and when they employ National Guard and
Reserve forces. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
told them in a July 9 memo that the
current capabilities balance between active and reserve
components is not
the best for the future. He wants change.
Half a world away, President Bush declared, responding
to a reporter in South Africa, We wont overextend our troops,
period.
Many lawmakers are worried about possible overuse of
US forcesparticularly in regard to Guard and Reserve forces.
Several US Senators, returning from a visit to Iraq,
predicted a very long stay for American troops. Sen.
Carl Levin (D-Mich.), ranking
member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, asserted
that US forces were stretched very thin. The committee chairman,
Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), did not go that far, but he did say that,
while US forces
overall are at levels able to carry out the missions ... we must
look very prudently when we ask more of them.
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| Now hear this: Active-reserve balance must change. |
Rumsfelds directive puts him somewhat at odds with 30 years of
Total Force policy, which had long called for mobilization of large
numbers
of reserves in the event the US conducts a major operation.
This was a deliberate move, taken in the wake of Vietnam, to make sure
that the US
public would be engaged in decisions about any future
war.
After the end of the Cold War, moreover, the Pentagon emphasized
a growing reliance on reserve forces and, during the
downsizing of the 1990s, shifted some duties from the active forces
to the reserves.
At issue, as well, is whether the new direction would
inevitably bring about an increase in active duty end
strength, something Rumsfeld
has steadfastly opposed.
In his memo, Rumsfeld declared that he wants to limit
involuntary mobilizations of individual reservists to not more
than one every six years. Moreover, he wants to ban any involuntary
mobilizations in the first 15 days of a rapid response operation.
Rumsfeld instructed Pentagon leaders to give reservists meaningful
work that cannot be accomplished by other readily available manpower.
He also wants reserves to remain on active duty only as long as
absolutely necessary.
The Pentagon chief called execution of these measures a matter
of utmost urgency.
Rumsfeld asked each service to produce, by July 31, an
assessment outlining its plans to correct imbalances
between active and reserve forces and to reduce dependence
on reserves in early deploying
units. He pointed specifically to capabilities that reside
exclusively or predominantly within the reserves and
that have been in high demand
for the war on terrorism.
The Air Force, which is considered the service model
for the Total Force policy, believes it already has about
the right balance
of active to reserve forces. However, service officials
do admit to some problems. For instance, the US militarys only
EC-130 Commando Solo psychological warfare aircraft unita high-demand
capabilityfalls
under the Air National Guard. (See Total Force in a Search for
Balance, p.
32.)
The Boeing Case
The Air Force has punished Boeing in ways that will cost
the company about $1 billion in lost business and penalties.
This is a result of what the service called serious violations of
contracting rules that occurred during the Evolved Expendable Launch
Vehicle competition
in October 1998. The sanctions could threaten Boeings survival
in the space launch market.
Peter B. Teets, undersecretary of the Air Force, announced
the penalties at a Pentagon press conference July 24.
Teets said a service investigation found that some Boeing
officials possessed 25,000 pages of stolen Lockheed Martin
EELV proprietary information. That information could
have helped Boeing win the lions
share of the first EELV contract, he said.
Moreover, maintained Teets, Boeing was not forthcoming with the
Air Force about the amount of Lockheed data in its possession,
and it took approximately four years for them to provide
us with all of it.
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| Boeings Delta IV EELV. Sanctions
may hurt. |
Teets declared that three Boeing divisions and three
Boeing employees were suspended from doing business with
the government for an indefinite period.
He also said DOD would transfer to Lockheed Martin seven
EELV contracts previously awarded to Boeing. Teets granted
Lockheed Martin permission
to establish a launchpad capability at Vandenberg AFB,
Calif., providing $200 million in Air Force funds to
help it do so. (After the original
competition, Lockheed decided that it was not worth the
investment to develop a launch capability at Vandenberg.)
The case is not closed. Teets noted that the Justice
Department has opened a criminal investigation into the
case and that Lockheed Martin
has launched a civil suit.
Boeing CEO Philip M. Condit, in a written statement,
apologized for the companys actions and said that, while the company
is disappointed by
the Air Force action, Boeing understands the services position
that unethical
behavior will not be tolerated.
Teets acknowledged he is concerned that the stiff sanctions
might drive Boeing from the launch services market. However,
he said, the Air Force cannot tolerate breaches of procurement
integrity and
must hold industry accountable for the actions of their employees.
Teets explained, though, that one of his highest priorities
as DODs top space executive is to ensure the nation has two
healthy families of launch vehicles to maintain assured access
to space. Because of that, he said the structure of the
penalties will enable
Boeing to continue competing for new launch business.
If Boeing demonstrates that it has moved quickly and
decisively to curb unethical practices in its rocket
business, Teets said, the Air
Force can lift the suspensionspossibly in as little as 60-90 days.
That would mean Boeing could compete, later this year,
for the next round of 15 to 20 EELV launches.
However, Teets said, if Boeing fails to respond strongly and
show its serious intent to fix its corporate culture,
the suspensions could become debarments.
Perry: North Korea an Imminent Danger
North Koreas nuclear weapons thrust has created a crisis which
could result in war only a few months from now, according
to former Defense
Secretary William J. Perry.
Perry drew attention from all quarters when he told the
Washington Post in a July interview, The nuclear program now under
way in North Korea poses an imminent danger of nuclear
weapons being detonated in American cities. Later, on PBSs Newshour
With Jim Lehrer, Perry explained that he referred not to a North
Korean nuclear missile attack but to a suitcase-type nuclear
bomb that North Korea would
either dispatch itself or sell to a terrorist group bent
on attacking America.
In July, North Korean officials claimed Pyongyang had
reprocessed 8,000 nuclear fuel rods into plutoniumenough for a
half-dozen nuclear weapons.
Chinese intelligence officials confirmed that reprocessing
was under way, but they estimated a lower number of rods
than claimed by the North Koreans. US intelligence reported
that Krypton-35a
gas by-product of fuel rod reprocessinghad been detected near
the demilitarized zone and probably emanated from a previously
unknown facility.
As Defense Secretary in the Clinton Administration, Perry
oversaw plans for air strikes on North Korean nuclear
facilities during a standoff on its weapons program.
Clinton opted instead to cut a deal
that provided North Korea with aid, including nuclear
power-generation technology, in exchange for North Koreas assurances
that it would halt its weapons program. Last year, Pyongyang
announced it had gone ahead
with its nuclear weapons program.
Perry said that Bush should engage in direct talks and coercive
diplomacy, which he defined as negotiation backed up by
a credible threat of military action.
Bush has consistently said that a nuclear-armed North
Korea is unacceptable but that the US would prefer a multilateral
solution to the situation, which the Administration refuses
to describe as a crisis. Three-way talks have taken place
between North Korea, China, and the US, but the talks have not proved
productive.
The ABL Meets the Physicists
USAFs Airborne Laser probably will work against liquid-fueled
theater-range ballistic missiles, but its prospective
use against ICBMs, particularly
those having solid propellants, could be much less successful,
according to a report of private experts that was released
in Washington in July.
The finding was part of a 400-page technical report prepared
by the American Physical Society, a group of 40,000 physicists.
The report identified a number of technical challenges
within the Administrations
proposed missile defense program that now includes the
ABL.
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| Will spent fuel rods lead to detonations in
US cities? |
The report, which dedicated about 80 pages to the ABL
issue, found an audience on Capitol Hill, and lawmakers
pressed the Missile Defense
Agency for a thorough response.
MDA said the report was under review and would not comment
on it directly, except to say that MDA officials believe
the current boost-phase architecture is sound and that
the missile defense program is headed
in the right direction.
MDA declared that it would conduct a thorough review
of boost-phase progress and problems by December, before any investments
are made in a development activity.
Agency officials emphasized
that they continue to believe that boost-phase technology has
great potential for playing a vital role in a layered
missile defense.
The Airborne Laser was intended originally only to shoot
down theater missiles as a means to protect US and allied
forces during overseas operations. (See Setting a Course for the
Airborne Laser, p.
46.) The ABL still enjoys support on Capitol Hill.
The physicists believe that the ABL can perform its original
missionthat is, it likely will work against short-range, liquid-fueled
rockets, if the ABL achieves projected power levels with
its high energy laser. However, they maintain that distance to the target
is critical.
If the distance is too great (more than 372 miles on
the ground), they say, the lasers power will fade, causing the
ABL to have to focus the laser on the target for longer periods of time
to
achieve a kill.
A longer attack duration will use more laser fuelreducing the
number of shots the ABL can make and the number of targets
it can engage. The
report concluded that the ABL, to counteract the range
problem, would have to orbit very close to enemy territory,
putting it at risk from attack
by enemy air defenses.
The physicists argue that solid-fueled ICBMs present
an even greater challenge. There are two main obstacles:
the ICBMs
tougher skin and greater speed.
The ABL works by heating up a missiles skin and causing its fuel
tank to rupture. Thus, say the physicists, it would be
less effective against a solid-fueled booster, which
has a stronger body to withstand
its own internal fuel combustion. They estimate the ABL
would need to be within about 190 miles (ground range)
to be effective against a solid-fueled
ICBM.
Solid-fueled rockets also fly faster than liquid-fueled
rockets and over longer ranges. The targeting task would
be much more difficult and require much more precision,
said the report.
Patrick P. Caruana, an executive with Northrop Grumman,
which is a principal ABL contractor, told Air Force Magazine
that targeting is an issue, but it is a manageable one.
He pointed out that a related program, the Armys Tactical High-Energy
Laser, has proved effective against live-fire incoming
artillery shells. And
thats not a thin-skinned fuel tank, said Caruana. Thats
a stainless steel casing.
Northrop Grumman determined, after much research, that
there was a vulnerable point on the artillery shell.
The THEL was able to maintain the laser on that point
and destroy the artillery shell.
However, the shell was tracked and lased at fairly
close range.