Is the A-10 headed
for the graveyard?
"If you're spending a lot of money to get improved
capability, that's the easiest way to demonstrate it," Gilmore said of the
planned test.
The A-10 is the only plane in the Air Force specifically designed for
close air support, a mission that has become urgent in the fight against ISIS
in the Mideast.
Able to
circle over a target for long periods, the straight-winged A-10 is supremely
maneuverable at low speeds and altitudes. When ground troops find themselves in
trouble -- and too close to the enemy for fighter jets to drop bombs without
risking friendly-fire casualties -- A-10 pilots can skim hillsides day and
night, under any type of weather, and engage ground targets with its 30 mm,
seven-barrel Gatling gun, which fires depleted uranium bullets at 3,900 rounds
per minute.
The F-35
is designed to fulfill a variety of roles, close air support among them, so it
won't function exactly in the same manner as the A-10, Pentagon officials said.
"The
F-35 will not do close air support mission the same way the A-10 does. It will
do it very differently. The A-10 was designed to be low, and slow, and close to
the targets it was engaging, relatively speaking," Frank Kendall III,
undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics, told the
Senate panel Tuesday. "We will not use the F-35 in the same way as the
A-10.."
"We're going to let the F-35 pilots take advantage of
the systems on that aircraft ... and see how well the missions are carried out
in terms of the ability to strike targets in a timely manner and accurately,
and then report on that," Gilmore said.
Different or not, the Pentagon expects the F-35 to come out
the winner in the face-off because it can handle different roles.
"Clearly the F-35 should have an advantage in higher
threat environments than the A-10 does," Gilmore said at Tuesday's
hearing.
"If you asked an A-10 to do air-to-air, it's
hopeless," Kendall said. The F-35 is designed to "do a variety of
missions: air dominance, strike and close air support."
Story highlights
- Pentagon wants to show
F-35's improved capability
- "If you asked an A-10
to do air-to-air, it's hopeless," Pentagon official says
(CNN)Can an old war horse that dates
back more than 40 years hold its own against the newest warbird loaded with the
latest in technology and weaponry?
The
Pentagon said it aims to find out and will pit the venerable A-10 Warthog
against the F-35 Lightning Joint Strike Fighter in a series of rigorous tests
replicating what the planes would face in battle.
"We
are going to do a comparative test of the ability of the F-35 to perform close
air support, combat search-and-rescue missions and related missions with the
A-10," Michael Gilmore, the Pentagon's director of operational test and
evaluation, told a Senate Armed Service Committee hearing on Tuesday.
The F-35
has been designated to replace the A-10 in the Air Force's main ground-attack
role by 2022, but the plan has been met with skepticism by critics who say the
$163 million F-35 can't do the job as well as the $18 million A-10.
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