|
The fighter force is under attack. Big price tags
for new acquisition plus the claim that the demand
for fighters is based on old requirements have spawned
doubts about the current and future role of fighters
in air and space power.
Earlier this year, for example, the New York Times pointed
out in an editorial that the Air Force "remains
committed to the F-22," then referred to the Raptor
as "a short-range tactical fighter designed for
Cold War dogfights." The newspaper suggested that "Air
Force dollars should go to unmanned reconnaissance
and attack craft like the Predator, long-range bombers,
and the troop transport planes that are in chronic
short supply."
Another defense critic, Lawrence J. Korb of the Council
on Foreign Relations, argues the Pentagon should be
spending money on "true" transformational
systems such as Unmanned Aerial Vehicles that were
used so successfully in Afghanistan.
More significant were reports in May that a draft
of the Pentagon's Defense Planning Guidance for Fiscal
2004 and beyond called for re-evaluating the F-22 program.
Specifically, it called for a study of the impact of
buying only 180 new F-22 air dominance fighters, rather
than the planned fleet of 339. The other future Air
Force air combat system, the F-35 strike fighter, faces
a similar review.
The idea that the fighter is on its way out reflects
a misunderstanding of the basic operational requirements
of joint warfare--and of the fighter's long history
of carrying forward innovative new developments in
air warfare.
Magnets for Criticism
Fighters and bombers have been magnets for criticism
and controversy all through the history of war in the
air and never more so than when the bill for enhanced
capability comes due. A few months before Pearl Harbor,
Gen. Henry H. "Hap" Arnold famously confessed, "Frankly,
fighters have been allowed to drift into the doldrums." As
a result, the US entered World War II with second-rate
fighters on the front lines.
In Vietnam, US airmen paid the price for lack of emphasis
on fighter development, as powerful but unwieldy F-105s
and F-4s were shot down by surface-to-air missiles
and agile MiG-21s flown by experienced North Vietnamese
pilots.
It hasn't been all that long since the United States
was forced to learn these stark lessons about military
airpower. Even so, the issue of whether to buy first-rate
fighters is back.
Today, the case against the fighters bounces from
budget worries to technology debates. Among the numerous
allegations are claims that fighters lack key performance
requirements, such as range; that they are overbuilt
to Soviet threat standards that no longer matter; or
that other air vehicle systems will soon be able to
take over the work of air dominance.
Running through it all is the charge that fighter
modernization plans favor gold-plated aircraft built
to meet the kinds of specifications that thrill fighter
pilots and aerospace engineers but exceed joint requirements.
Most damaging are doubts about whether so-called "short-range
fighters" truly qualify as prospects for the transformation
team. With transformation atop the list of defense
priorities, most attention focuses on precision weapons,
the potential of UAVs, long-range bombers, and future
space systems.
Scratch the surface of the fighter debate and one
of the first problems to arise is the widespread perception
that a mafia of fighter pilots is willing to sacrifice
other systems and even transformational capabilities
to preserve their single-seat cockpits and silk scarves.
According to this line of thinking, the passion for
afterburners and nine-G turns biases Air Force generals
in favor of funding for fighters and against systems
that threaten to do some of the work of fighters.
In the Air Force, pilots--especially fighter pilots--dominate
the ranks of three- and four-star generals. Since 1982,
all Air Force Chiefs of Staff have been fighter pilots.
Fighter pilots of Tactical Air Command appeared to
win the battle of the Air Force's post-Cold War reorganization
when Strategic Air Command was disbanded in 1992 and
the new Air Combat Command, emblazoned with the old
TAC patch and commanded by a senior fighter pilot,
Gen. John Michael Loh, was stood up at TAC's headquarters
at Langley AFB, Va. Through the defense drawdown of
the 1990s, USAF's force structure was expressed in
terms of "fighter wing equivalents."

Some critics claim that fighter aircraft are not suited to transformation,
but US fighters have often been the first to take breakthrough technology
into combat. (Staff photo by Guy Aceto)
|
|
The Fighter Surge
In truth, fighter pilots started to dominate Air Force
leadership when fighters came to dominate the force
structure. In the 1970s, technology development feeding
on the lessons of Vietnam produced the F-15 as a true
air superiority fighter. A competition to build an
innovative, lightweight fighter led to the design of
the F-16. Fresh emphasis on conventional warfare and
cooperation with the Army through AirLand Battle helped
push a major buildup in fighters in the 1980s.
Brig. Gen. R. Michael Worden, author of the book The
Rise of the Fighter Generals, notes that Secretary
of Defense Melvin R. Laird in the early 1970s pushed
for "youth" in the military leadership
ranks. The Air Force responded in part by giving
early promotions to younger fighter wing commanders,
with the result being that they "were young
enough to compete in greater proportion for the higher
flag officer ranks before reaching mandatory retirement
at 35 years of service." Later, disproportionate
growth in numbers of fighters put more and more fighter
pilots in the rated pipeline for senior jobs.
The cliché of fighter pilots protecting their
interests got new life when UAVs began to make serious
strides in capability and usefulness.
"Not long ago, an Air Force F-15 pilot had to
be persuaded to forgo a rated pilot's job to fly--I
guess that's still the correct word--an unmanned Predator
aircraft from a location far from the field of battle," said
Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defense in
recent congressional testimony. He went on to praise
the Air Force leadership for "working hard to
encourage this pilot and others to think of piloting
UAVs as a major mission and to become trailblazers
in defining new concepts of operations."
The implication was that neither fighters nor fighter
pilots were naturally well-suited to transformation.
Yet the history of air operations attests to the place
of fighters in the front rank of innovation and transformation.
Technological superiority is the fighter's first and
foremost contribution. In air warfare, the ability
to survive, complete the mission, and control the airspace
determines the success of the air campaign. Spads,
P-51s, F-4s, F-15s, and F-22s have all had the same
goal: Combine performance and tactics to outgun anything
else in the air and then pivot off that dominance to
conduct devastating ground attack operations.
Fighters past and present share basic aerodynamic
attributes that explain why fighters remain on the
front lines, generation after generation. While individual
specifications vary, every fighter is designed with
power and maneuverability in mind. These and other
physical attributes shared by all fighters represent
the attempt to achieve state-of-the-art aerodynamics
and deliver the maximum in air combat capability.
Consequently, fighters have often been the first to
take breakthrough technology into combat. Cockpit radar,
jet engines, and pods for self-designated laser-guided
bombs all went to war first on fighters. The term "fighter" is
decades old, but today's fighters bear no more resemblance
to the World War II era than a Ferrari does to a Model
T.

The F-15, here launching an AIM-7 missile, was designed to outgun anything
else in the air. The F-22, with stealth, supercruise, and triple the
F-15's range, represents a new generation of air dominance. (USAF photo
by SSgt. Matthew C. Simpson)
|
|
Precision and Stealth
Fighters were at the core of the precision and stealth
revolutions of the 1990s. The wave of transformation
that led to the stunning results of the Gulf War depended
on fighters and fighter-bombers as the engines of change.
In the Gulf War, for the first time, American forces
won air superiority quickly and efficiently. The F-15
led the dogfight results and suffered no losses. The
F-117 stealth fighter dissected the difficult Iraqi
defenses while the F-111 fighter-bomber turned its
precision capabilities to the unforeseen task of destroying
Iraqi tanks half-buried in sand.
Fighters succeeded in the Gulf War because their greater
survivability--whether in the form of air combat maneuvering
or stealth--gave them the widest range of potential
action in the battlespace and because they had the
latest technology for precision attack. Aircraft originally
designed for more limited missions--for example, the
F-4G "Wild Weasels"--proved capable of employing
new weapons and tactics. Versatility, sheer numbers,
and the higher chances of mission success made fighters
the tool with which air commanders accomplished the
broadest and deepest range of tasks.
Following the Gulf War, the fighter force as a whole
received targeting and weapons upgrades that extended
the benefit of precision throughout the Air Force,
Navy, and Marine Corps. The Navy made its F-14 Tomcat
into a precision-capable "Bombcat." In 1995,
just four years after the Gulf War, fighters carried
out Operation Deliberate Force, the two-week air campaign
against Bosnian Serb targets. By 1999, it was the fighters
that drew most of the assignment for time-critical
targeting in Operation Allied Force. A case in point
was the F-15E, modified in the mid-1990s so the pilot
could receive video images of a target while he is
en route. The B-2 stealth bomber was the only aircraft
able to drop the all-weather Joint Direct Attack Munition
in 1999. By the start of Operation Enduring Freedom
in October 2001, however, Navy F/A-18s and F-14s and
other Air Force aircraft all employed JDAM to great
effect.
In keeping with the transformation tradition of the
fighter, the F-22 incorporates all-aspect stealth and
advanced avionics in an advanced fighter design. The
combination makes the F-22 the most survivable aircraft
ever to fly and will give it superior ability to conduct
air-to-air or ground-attack missions.
Still, the chorus of doubt about the future of the
fighter has grown stronger since the mid-1990s. Critics
point to several shortcomings thought to inhibit the
utility of fighters.
The Range Issue
Heading the list is range--or the supposed lack of
it. Geographic access to the battlespace in major regional
conflicts emerged as a possible Achilles' heel for
the fighter force. The worry has been that either military
attacks by the enemy or political constraints from
friends could deprive US fighters of bases from which
to launch operations. A 1993 Rand study observed that
the "greater the combat range of an aircraft,
the more likely it is to find a suitable beddown base
in any theater."
As the US drifted away from Saudi Arabia and some
other Gulf allies, the question of access loomed even
larger. Raids such as Operation Desert Strike in 1996
and Operation Desert Fox in 1998 raised new dilemmas
with allies reluctant to grant use of in-theater bases
for new offensive strikes. USAF heavy bombers, Navy
aircraft carriers, and long land-based fighter missions
helped take up the slack.
Critical claims about fighter range deserve far closer
scrutiny than they have so far received. It is axiomatic
that no combat aircraft can ever have too much range.
The new fighter designs make this abundantly clear.
The Navy F/A-18E/F multirole Super Hornet was designed
with about 25 percent more range than extant Navy fighters.
The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter will more than double
the unrefueled combat radius of the fighters that it
replaces. The F-22 will triple the combat radius of
current fighters.
However, actual combat radius depends on a whole host
of variables, ranging from altitude to the amount of
ordnance carried and the attack profile.
Today, virtually no combat missions take place without
air refueling. In Operation Allied Force, the crowding
of in-theater bases compelled Air Force F-15Es to fly
seven-hour missions from RAF Lakenheath in England
to targets in the former Yugoslavia, but their missions
were successful. Moreover, even bombers need prestrike
and poststrike refueling. B-2s leaving the target area
over Serbia were thirsty for fuel until they met their
tankers in the Mediterranean.
The debate about the combat utility of fighters boils
down to a narrow band of scenarios where basing concerns
and extreme inland ranges stretch out the combat radius
and relatively light air defenses take attrition out
of the equation. Afghanistan after the first few days
was just such a scenario.
Operation Enduring Freedom presented a serious access
challenge. In-theater bases were few and not particularly
close to the action. Land-based and carrier-based strike
fighters had to use multiple air refuelings from Air
Force tankers to get enough range. The extreme distance
to the target area limited the fighters' time on station.
Bombers operating from Diego Garcia faced no such
constraints, loitering for hours at a stretch to provide
on-call air strikes. The success of the bombers--which
accounted for more than 70 percent of all of the ordnance
dropped during the war--led some to question whether
fighters would ever be needed again. "Restart
the B-52 assembly line," sneered Ralph Peters,
a retired Army lieutenant colonel and pundit. "We
don't need extravagantly priced dogfighting machines."
The focus on range left out the other side of the
coin of anti-access scenarios: air defenses.

The F-117 was the leading edge of the revolution in precision and stealth
in the 1980s and 1990s. US fighter forces quickly established air superiority
in the 1991 Gulf War and every war since. (USAF photo by SSgt. Andy
Dunaway)
|
|
Fighter Territory
Hostile airspace is fighter territory. With the exception
of the stealthy B-2, bombers require significant standoff
ranges to strike targets in heavily defended airspace.
In Enduring Freedom, the air defenses--rudimentary
as they were--had to be defanged first or even the
Vietnam-era MiG-21s possessed by the Taliban could
have been a lethal threat to the bombers. The B-1s
and B-52s loitered safely over Afghanistan only after
it was cleared of air defense threats by carrier-based
fighter and B-2 strikes. Even so, fighters were always
in the area when bombers operated.
In the Balkans in 1999, long-endurance on-call air
support operations with the bombers would not have
been possible with the roving Serbian SA-6s on the
loose. In those situations, it falls to fighters such
as the F-16CJ to perform hunt-and-kill missions of
lethal suppression of enemy air defenses. Many potential
hotspots in the war on terrorism include stiff air
defenses. It will be up to the fighters, perhaps assisted
by the B-2 and Tomahawk cruise missiles, to take them
down.
As recent operations attest, fighters do much more
than engage in dogfights. New platforms such as the
F-22 and F-35 are designed to play multiple roles and
streamline the fighter inventory.
Still, the primary mission of the fighter boils down
to air dominance.
Regional air dominance counts. US fighters have flown
more than 100,000 sorties for combat air patrols over
northern and southern Iraq. When the Iraqi air force
started violating the northern no-fly zone, the operation
needed more fighters to keep control of the airspace.
A senior defense official said: "I talked to
the Turkish general staff; they said they understood,
and within a couple of days, it was approved, and we
put the fighters in there." For these regional
air dominance missions, only fighters will do. "If
Saddam can't fly up here [north Iraq] and can't fly
down here [south Iraq], that really puts great constraints
on his air force as far as their training," the
senior defense official explained. "They can't
operate with the army in the south; they can't operate
with the army in the north."
Even in low-intensity conflict, air commanders cannot
run the campaign without important battlespace management
platforms such as the E-3 AWACS and E-8 Joint STARS,
but fighters need to be available to defend them. "The
first thing I want to know is where the F-15s are going
to be in case we have to go hide behind them," said
one officer explaining mission planning for an electronic
attack aircraft. In every air operation from Desert
Storm to Allied Force, fighters manned combat air patrol
stations to protect other assets from the threat of
attack by even a handful of enemy aircraft.

Putting the brakes on US fighter modernization is false economy. The
F-22, shown here, and the F-35 are designed to maintain the US advantage
far into the 21st century. (USAF photo by Kevin Robertson)
|
|
How Many and How Much
For those who concede fighters have some utility,
a second pernicious line of argument is that today's
roster of fighters provide all the air dominance needed--and
that stealth is a waste of money. Naval analyst Norman
Friedman wrote in the Naval Institute's Proceedings in
May that ongoing technology improvements might make
stealth irrelevant and that "the sheer cost of
building F-22s might make it impossible to begin a
new program." He went on to say that "after
all, the current threat is such that aircraft already
in production seem to be quite effective against it."
Even since the heyday of the Military Reform Caucus
in the 1980s, there has been a widespread view that
adequate defense of the nation could be had by buying
cheaper, less-capable fighters. The myth of the cheap
fighter was a staple of the Reforms. The "cheap
hawk" school of defense policy carries on that
tradition, supporting a strong defense and a robust
military, but disdaining any effort to differentiate
among so-called "advanced jet aircraft" or
to evaluate operational arguments for their joint warfighting
roles. By failing to look at these factors, the cheap
hawks gloss over the real debate about how fighters
contrast or complement each other in joint operations.
Also lost in the price tag argument is the fact that,
when war breaks out, the best systems are sent in first.
Plans for the coalition air campaign of Desert Storm
centered deliberately on the stealthy F-117. The mainstay
F-16s, which lacked precision targeting in 1991, filled
in the gaps, with missions suited to their more limited
capabilities. The one attempt to send F-16s in a large
package against a heavily defended target near Baghdad
resulted in loss of life and a decision that no target
in Iraq was worth the risk--because, of course, the
more advanced and survivable F-117 was around to do
the job.
Putting the brakes on US fighter modernization is
false economy and discards the nation's key asymmetric
advantage. The fighters strengthen US air and space
power; new ones are needed to help the US stay ahead
of emerging capabilities. Already, advanced Russian
SAMs can be found in many countries. They are being
marketed to many others.
Ensuring that US aircraft can get into a target area
and perform their missions--now and in the future--ultimately
comes down to whether the fighters can be tasked to
take on the total threat of adversary aircraft and
surface-to-air missiles. The F-22 Raptor and the F-35
Joint Strike Fighter are specifically designed to unravel
integrated air defenses. Standoff cruise missiles such
as the Tomahawk Land Attack Missile augment air dominance--but
TLAMs, too, are vulnerable. One TLAM flying a preplanned
route was shot down by anti-aircraft fire during the
Gulf War.
It is interesting to note that the fighter debate
seems to be taking place only in the United States.
Worldwide, the market for fighters remains strong and
competitive, with many nations choosing to spend their
defense dollars on fighters.
In every air campaign, opening the skies for friendly
operations is the foundation of all that comes after.
Fighters also remain the cornerstone of sovereign air
defense. Operation Noble Eagle put fighter patrols
over many parts of the United States after Sept. 11.
No other type of aircraft could have done that job.
Whether at home or abroad, winning air superiority
is the reason fighters will continue to be the aces
of air warfare.
Rebecca Grant is a contributing editor of Air Force
Magazine. She is president of IRIS Independent Research,
Inc., in Washington, D.C., and has worked for Rand,
the Secretary of the Air Force, and the Chief of Staff
of the Air Force. Grant is a fellow of the Eaker Institute
for Aerospace Concepts, the public policy and research
arm of the Air Force Association's Aerospace Education
Foundation. Her most recent article, "The
Bekaa Valley War," appeared in the June 2002
issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
|