§ The JSF program makes Time magazine’s Monday, 25 February
edition for all the reasons a company would not want its marquee product
featured: Marine Liberman was uncharacteristically modest for a Navy SEAL turned
fighter pilot who had just landed an F-35 at its initial operational base in
Yuma, Ariz. Liberman's reticence was understandable. While the Marines hailed
his arrival as a sign that their initial F-35 squadron is now operational,
there's one sticking point. "It's an operational squadron," a Marine spokesman
said. "The aircraft is not operational." And now Sequester-mandated cuts will
push both the purchase of additional planes and their required testing into the
future with an inevitable result: the
cost of each plane will rise even higher. Unfortunately, that won't be
anything new for the F-35 Lightning II. The single-engine,
single-seat f-35 is a real-life example of the adage that a camel is a horse
designed by a committee. As the Pentagon pivots to the Pacific, the
tyranny of the region’s vast distance will make the F-35's short combat radius (469 miles for the
Marines, 584 for the Air Force, 615 for the Navy) a bigger challenge. On the
cost of the program, defense Analyst Richard Aboulafia offers: "Lockheed Martin
and the F-35 program have not shown any kind of sensitivity to costs. That makes
for a vulnerable program." While debate swirls around how to build the F-35
right, there's a more important question: Is it the right kind of plane for the
U.S. military in the 21st century? The F-35 is a so-called fifth-generation
fighter, which means it is built from the ground up to elude enemy radar that
could be used to track and destroy it. Stealth was all the rage in military
circles when the Pentagon conceived the F-35. But that was well before the drone
explosion, which makes the idea of flying a human through flak and missiles seem
quaint. "The Air Force," Aboulafia says, "eagerly drank gallons of the
fifth-generation purple liquid." Improved sensors and computing are eroding
stealth's value every day and eventually they will give potential foes
"actionable target information" on stealth platforms. And stealthy jet requires sacrifices in
range, flying time and weapon-carrying capability--the hat trick of aerial
warfare.
§ Australia’s Business Spectator reporter Robert Gottleibsen
reminds his readers that he has been explaining the true situation with the JSF
for over 10 years. His first Business Spectator commentary on the JSF in
2007, he reflects, explained how the Coalition made the initial mistakes. “In
the five years that followed that first commentary, I have written almost 40 JSF
commentaries taking our readers through the sad saga – I wanted to be wrong but
unfortunately I was right.”
The
Most Expensive Weapon Ever Built
25 February 2013
Marine Major Aric "Walleye" Liberman was
uncharacteristically modest for a Navy SEAL turned fighter pilot. He had just
landed an F-35--one of the 2,457 jets the Pentagon plans to buy for $400
billion, making it the costliest weapons program in human history--at its
initial operational base late last year. Amid celebratory hoopla, he declined
photographers' requests to give a thumbs-up for the cameras that sunny day in
Yuma, Ariz. "No, no, no," he demurred with a smile.
Liberman's reticence was understandable. For while the Marines hailed
his arrival as a sign that their initial F-35 squadron is now operational,
there's one sticking point. "It's an operational squadron," a Marine spokesman
said. "The aircraft is not operational."
The F-35, designed as the U.S. military's lethal hunter for 21st
century skies, has become the hunted, a poster child for Pentagon profligacy in
a new era of tightening budgets. Instead of the stars
and stripes of the U.S. Air Force emblazoned on its fuselage, it might as well
have a bull's-eye. Its pilots' helmets are
plagued with problems, it hasn't yet dropped or fired weapons, and the software
it requires to go to war remains on the drawing
board.
That's why when Liberman landed his F-35 before an appreciative
crowd, including home-state Senator John McCain, he didn't demonstrate its most
amazing capability: landing like a helicopter using its precision-cast titanium
thrust-vectoring nozzle. That trick remains reserved for test pilots, not
operational plane drivers like him.
The price tag, meanwhile, has nearly doubled since 2001, to $396
billion.
Production delays have forced the Air Force and Navy to
spend at least $5 billion to extend the lives of existing planes. The
Marine Corps--the cheapest service, save for its love of costly jump jets (which
take off and land almost vertically) for its pet aircraft carriers--have spent
$180 million on 74 used British AV-8 jets for spare parts to keep their
Reagan-era Harriers flying until their version of the F-35 truly comes online.
Allied governments are increasingly weighing
alternatives to the F-35.
But the accounting is about to get even worse as concern over
spending on the F-35 threatens other defense programs.
On March 1, if lawmakers cannot reach a new budget deal, the Pentagon faces more
than $500 billion in spending cuts in the form of sequestration, which
translates into a 10% cut in projected budgets over the coming decade. Two years
ago, the White House predicted that those cuts would be so onerous to
defense-hawk Republicans that they would never happen. But the GOP is now split,
with a growing number of members who are more concerned about the deficit than
defense.
"We are spending maybe 45% of the world's budget on defense. If we
drop to 42% or 43%, would we be suddenly in danger of some kind of invasion?"
asked Representative Justin Amash, a Michigan Republican and part of a new breed
of deficit hawks who talk of spending as a bigger threat than war. "We're
bankrupting our country, and it's going to put us in
danger."
House Republican leaders have started to speak of the military cuts
as inevitable. President Obama has warned that without a new plan from Congress,
there will be "tough decisions in the weeks ahead," like the recent announcement
that an aircraft-carrier deployment to the Persian Gulf will be delayed to save
money.
The sad irony is that cutting the F-35 at this point won't save much
money in the near term, because the Pentagon recently pushed nearly $5 billion
in F-35 contracts out the door. Yet sequester-mandated
cuts will push both the purchase of additional planes and their required testing
into the future with an inevitable result: the cost of each plane will rise even
higher. Unfortunately, that won't be anything new for the F-35 Lightning
II.
How Did We Get Here?
The single-engine, single-seat f-35 is a real-life example of the
adage that a camel is a horse designed by a committee.
Think of it as a flying Swiss Army knife, able to engage in dogfights, drop
bombs and spy. Tweaking the plane's hardware makes the F-35A stealthy enough for
the Air Force, the F-35B's vertical-landing capability lets it operate from the
Marines' amphibious ships, and the Navy F-35C's design is beefy enough to endure
punishing carrier operations.
"We've put all our eggs in the F-35 basket," said Texas Republican
Senator John Cornyn. Given that, one might think the military would have
approached the aircraft's development conservatively. In fact, the Pentagon did
just the opposite. It opted to build three versions of
a single plane averaging $160 million each (challenge No. 1), agreed that the
planes should be able to perform multiple missions (challenge No. 2), then
started rolling them off the assembly line while the blueprints were still in
flux--more than a decade before critical developmental testing was finished
(challenge No. 3). The military has already spent $373 million to fix planes
already bought; the ultimate repair bill for imperfect planes has been estimated
at close to $8 billion.
Back in 2002, Edward Aldridge, then the Pentagon's top weapons buyer,
said the F-35 was "setting new standards for technological advances" and
"rewriting the books on acquisition and business practices." His successor
voiced a different opinion last year. "This will make a
headline if I say it, but I'm going to say it anyway," Frank Kendall said.
"Putting the F-35 into production years before the first test flight was
acquisition malpractice. It should not have been
done."
The Pentagon and its allies say the need for the F-35 was so dire
that the plane had to be built as it was being designed. (More than a decade
into its development, blueprints are changing about 10 times a day, seven days a
week.) "The technological edge of the American tactical air fleet is only about
five years, and both Russia and China are fielding fifth-generation fighters of
their own," argues Tom Donnelly, a defense expert at the American Enterprise
Institute. "Preserving the cumulative quantity-quality advantage requires that
the United States field a full fleet of fifth-generation fighters
now."
Others suggest that no nation is close to fielding weapons in
sufficient quality and quantity to challenge U.S. air dominance anytime soon and
that the rush to develop the F-35 was more internal than external. "There's always this sexual drive for a new airplane on the
part of each service," says Tom Christie, the Pentagon's chief weapons tester
from 2001 to 2005. "Persistent, urgent and
natural."
The resulting bastard child was a compromise, not optimum for any one
service but good enough for all three.
Neither the Air Force nor the Navy liked its stubby design. The F-35C's squat
fuselage puts its tailhook close to its landing gear (7 ft., compared with 18 on
the F-18 it is replacing), making it tough to grab the arresting cable on an
aircraft carrier. Its short range means aircraft carriers ferrying it into
battle will have to sail close to enemy shores if the F-35C is to play a role.
It can fly without lumbering aerial tankers only by
adding external fuel tanks, which erases the stealthiness that is its prime
war-fighting asset.
Cramming the three services into the program reduced management
flexibility and put the taxpayer in a fiscal headlock. Each service had the
leverage generated by threatening to back out of the program, which forced cost
into the backseat, behind performance. "The Air Force potentially could have
adopted the Navy variant, getting significantly more range and structural
durability," says John Young Jr., a top Navy and Pentagon civilian official from
2001 to 2009. "But the Air Force leadership refused to consider such
options."
Yet if the Navy, and Young, were upset with the Air Force, the Air
Force was upset with the Marines. "This is a jobs program for Marine aviation,"
says retired general Merrill McPeak, Air Force chief of staff from 1990 to 1994.
"The idea that we could produce a committee design that is good for everybody is
fundamentally wrong." He scoffs at the Marine demand for a plane that can land
vertically, saying, "The idea of landing on a beach and supporting your troops
close up from some improvised airfield, à la Guadalcanal, is not going to
happen."
Focused on waging two post-9/11 wars, the Pentagon let the F-35
program drift as costs ballooned and schedules slipped for a decade. The Marines' F-35 was supposed to be capable of waging war in
April 2010, the Air Force's in June 2011 and the Navy's in April 2012. In a
break with Pentagon custom, there now is no such "initial operating capability"
date for any of them; each is likely to be delayed several
years.
Regardless of the plane's merit, the lawmakers pushing for it are
hardly disinterested observers. The then 48 members of the Joint Strike Fighter
Caucus, many of whom sit on key Pentagon-overseeing panels, pocketed twice as
much as nonmembers in campaign contributions from the F-35's top contractors in
the 2012 election cycle. Those lawmakers' constituents, in turn, hold many of
the F-35 program's 133,000 jobs spread across 45 states. (F-35 builder Lockheed
Martin says jobs will double once the plane enters full
production.)
Complicating matters further, the Pentagon and Lockheed have been at
war with each other for years. Air Force Lieut. General Christopher Bogdan, a
senior Pentagon F-35 manager, declared last summer that the relationship was
"the worst I've ever seen--and I've been in some bad ones." But the two sides
insist the worst is now behind them. Lockheed CEO Marillyn Hewson said last
month that the aircraft has topped 5,000 flight hours, stepped up its
flight-test schedule and is steadily pushing into new corners of its flight
envelope. "Our maturing production line, operational-base stand-up and expanded
pilot training are all strong indicators of the F-35 program's positive
trajectory," she said. Deliveries of fresh F-35s more than doubled in 2012, to
30 planes.
Pilots love the F-35. There are few gauges,
buttons or knobs in the cockpit. "What you have in front of you is a big
touchscreen display--it's an interface for the iPad generation," says
Marine Colonel Arthur Tomassetti, an F-35 test pilot.
"You have an airplane that with very small movements of your left and
right hand does what you want it to do. And if you don't want it to do anything,
it stays where you left it." That makes it easy to fly. "I'm watching the
emerald-colored sea up against the white sand," Tomassetti says of his flights
from Florida's Eglin Air Force Base along the shore of the Gulf of Mexico. "I
remember lots of flights in other airplanes where I never had time to do
anything like that."
But military technology has been moving away from manned fighters for
years. Drones, standoff weapons and GPS-guided bombs have cut the utility of,
and need for, such short-leg piloted planes. Their limits become even more
pronounced amid the Pentagon's pivot to the Pacific,
where the tyranny of distance makes the F-35's short combat radius (469 miles
for the Marines, 584 for the Air Force, 615 for the Navy) a bigger
challenge.
Computers are key to flying the plane. But instead of taking
advantage of simplicity, the F-35 is heading in the other direction:
its complexity can be gleaned from its 24 million lines of computer code,
including 9.5 million on board the plane. That's more
than six times as much as the Navy F-18 has. The F-35 computer code, government
auditors say, is "as complicated as anything on
earth."
Computers also were supposed to replace most prototyping and allow
all three kinds of F-35s to roll off the Texas assembly line at the same time,
just as Avalons, Camrys and Venzas are rolling out of Toyota's huge Kentucky
plant. "Advances in the technology, in our design tools and in our manufacturing
processes have significantly changed the manner in which aircraft are designed
and built today," Paul Kaminski, the Pentagon's top weapons buyer, said in
1997.
But Lockheed is no Toyota. Aviation Week & Space Technology
magazine, the bible of the aerospace industry and a traditional supporter,
published an editorial last fall that declared the program "already a failure"
on cost and schedule and said "the jury is still out" on its capabilities. It
suggested pitting the F-35 against existing fighters--Air Force F-15s and F-16s
and Navy F-18s--for future U.S. fighter purchases.
J. Michael Gilmore, Christie's successor as the Pentagon's top
weapons tester, reported in January that all three versions will be slower and
less maneuverable than projected. Weight-saving efforts have made the plane 25%
more vulnerable to fire. Only one of three F-35s flown by the U.S. military, he
added, was ready to fly between March and October.
Such problems inevitably lead to delays, which relentlessly drive up
the price. "Lockheed Martin and the F-35 program have
not shown any kind of sensitivity to costs," says Richard Aboulafia, who
tracks military aviation for the Teal Group, which analyzes the defense
business. "That makes for a vulnerable
program."
And dark clouds are gathering. Pentagon and Lockheed officials know
they need to sell hundreds of F-35s to a dozen nations to reduce the cost of
each U.S. plane. But Canada announced in December that it is considering
alternatives to its planned buy of 65 F-35s after an independent analysis pegged
their lifetime cost at nearly $46 billion, roughly double an earlier estimate
(the estimated U.S. lifetime cost: $1.5 trillion). Australia recently suggested
it wants 24 more St. Louis--built Boeing F-18s, almost guaranteeing a reduction
in its planned purchase of up to 100 F-35s.
The Right Kind of Plane?
While debate swirls around how to build the F-35 right, there's a
more important question: Is it the right kind of plane for the U.S. military in
the 21st century?
The F-35 is a so-called fifth-generation fighter, which means it is built from
the ground up to elude enemy radar that could be used to track and destroy it.
Stealth was all the rage in military circles when the Pentagon conceived the
F-35. But that was well before the drone explosion, which makes the idea of
flying a human through flak and missiles seem quaint. "The Air Force," Aboulafia says, "eagerly drank gallons of
the fifth-generation purple liquid."
Improved sensors and computing are eroding stealth's value every
day,
says Admiral Jonathan Greenert, the chief of naval operations. Eventually, he warns, they
will give potential foes "actionable target information" on stealth
platforms.
The Air Force feared "additional fourth-generation fighter
acquisition as a direct threat to fifth-generation fighter programs," Air Force
Lieut. Colonel Christopher Niemi, a veteran F-22 pilot, wrote in the
November-December 2012 issue of the service's Air & Space Power Journal. Its
refusal to reconsider buying new fourth-generation F-15s and F-16s in lieu of
some F-35s "threatens to reduce the size of the Air Force's fielded fighter
fleet to dangerously small numbers, particularly in the current fiscal
environment."
A stealthy jet requires sacrifices in range, flying time and
weapon-carrying capability--the hat trick of aerial warfare.
All those factors have played a role in the fate of the Air Force's F-22
fighter, the nation's only other fifth-generation warplane. It has been sitting
on runways around the globe for seven years, pawing at the tarmac as the nation
waged wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya. Yet the
F-22, built to fight wars against enemies that have yet to materialize, has yet
to fly a single combat mission.
If sequestration happens March 1, F-35 officials have made it clear
they will be forced to slow production and delay flight tests. Both steps will
make each plane that is ultimately bought more expensive.
But thanks to $4.8 billion in Pentagon contracts for 31 planes pushed
out the door barely 100 hours before the original Jan. 2 sequestration deadline,
much of the program will continue on autopilot.
"The F-35 program has built up a good buffer by getting the most
recent lot of aircraft awarded in time," says Todd Harrison, a defense-budget
expert at the independent Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. "That
means Lockheed and all the subcontractors have a backlog of work that won't be
affected by sequestration, so they can continue working as planned for the time
being."
Apparently the F-35 may end up being pretty stealthy after
all.
_____
Robert Gottliebsen
Business Spectator
15 February 2013
Step by step Australia’s largest military purchase the F-35 Joint
Strike Fighter is unravelling. For a decade its performance failures, delays and
cost over runs have been concealed by lies and half truths much of which have
come out of the US but which have also been duplicated by our defence chiefs.
With the assistance of the Airpower Australia group, headed by Peter
Goon and Carlo Kopp, I have been explaining the true
situation with the JSF for over 10 years – first in The Australian
newspaper and now in Business Spectator. Around 2002, I started writing
about the false statements that came from Australian defence chiefs about the
JSF delays and cost overruns. Then I realised that despite the huge escalation
in costs the aircraft would be hideously costly to run and would be no match for
the equivalent Russian or Chinese aircraft.
Just as our pilots were murdered when they flew the outdated Buffalo
fighters in the second world war, so they will simply be shot down flying a
hopelessly inferior JSF.
I
gain no satisfaction from being right because our long-term air defence is now
in mortal danger, but I am amazed that a mere business columnist could have
access to more accurate information than our defence chiefs. Thanks again to
Airpower.
Very few other journalists have followed either Airpower or me, but
that is changing and I expect a big volley of “exclusives” in coming months as
the JSF project unravels and the truth comes out.
My task now will be to get the Australian cabinet to move beyond
discovering the horror of JSF failure to protect our air defence and to try and
save some of the enterprises that do work for the JSF – Australia was kept on
board the JSF program by a volley of supply contracts in politically sensitive
seats.
We are helped by the fact that both parties share responsibility for the JSF
disaster. John Howard made the initial mistakes.
The global journalistic catch-up to this disaster started in the US
but the dramatic speech in the Australian Parliament this week by Dennis Jensen,
the WA Liberal member of the Joint Standing Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade
Committee, showed we are also waking up.
Jensen demanded that Tom Burbage, the head of the JSF program with
Lockheed Martin, come to our parliament and explain why he gave “false and
misleading information” to the Australian parliament.
Jensen said: “If we do not insist on full transparency, our fighting
men and women will be the ones to pay the price, not those in Russell offices
(Australian Defence Headquarters) or the boardrooms of Lockheed Martin.”
In the US, David Axe writes in Wired: “America’s latest
stealth fighter just got heavier, slower and more sluggish. For the second time
in a year, the Pentagon has eased the performance requirements of the F-35 Joint
Strike Fighter (JSF). The reduced specs – including a slower acceleration and
turning rate – lower the bar for the troubled trillion-dollar JSF program
allowing it to proceed toward full-rate production despite ongoing problems with
the plane’s complex design... the JSF is meant to be a jack of all trades,
equally capable of dropping bombs and fighting other aircraft – the latter
requiring extreme nimbleness in the air.
“For the pilots who will eventually take the F-35 into combat, the
JSF’s reduced performance means they might not be able to outfly and outfight
the latest Russian- and Chinese-made fighters. Even before the downgrades, some
analysts questioned the F-35′s ability to defeat newer Sukhoi and Shenyang jets.
“Despite the JSF’s lower specs, Lockheed bizarrely claims its new
plane is now more manoeuvrable than every other fighter in the world except the
company’s own F-22.”
So Americans are learning the truth that both Airpower and myself
have been writing for a long time. As Americans discover the truth so the lies
and half-truths will have to stop. The danger is that as these lies come to the
surface the whole program will be scrapped when it should be merged with the
F22, which has been mothballed for political reasons.
My first commentary on the JSF in Business Spectator (Reviewing the
indefensible, December 31, 2007) explains how the Coalition made
the initial mistakes.
According to a Business Spectator search of ‘Gottliebsen and
JSF’ in the five years that followed that first commentary, I have written
almost 40 JSF commentaries taking our readers through the sad saga – I wanted to
be wrong but unfortunately I was right.
#
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