The Air Force Only Has 6 Working B-1B
Bombers
A crisis?
At the Senate confirmation hearing for Gen. John Hyten on Jul. 30,
2019 it was disclosed that the U.S. Air Force has only six fully
mission-capable B-1B bombers.
The B-1 fleet is in the midst of an intensive slate of maintenance
work and upgrades. Of the 61 jets, 15 are in depot maintenance and 39 aircraft
are down for inspections or other issues, Sen. Mike Rounds, a South Dakota
senator, said during the hearing.
As reported by Air Force Magazine, in response, Hyten implored
lawmakers to provide B-1 maintenance funding to reverse the fleet's problems.
"We were just beating the heck out of them, deploying them,
deploying them," Hyten said. "We had to pull back a little and get
after fixing those issues. The depots can do that if they have stable
funding."
The House Armed Services seapower and projection forces
subcommittee hinted at the issue in legislation earlier this year. House
lawmakers asked the U.S. Air Force (USAF) to report back with a readiness
recovery plan for the conventionally armed bomber. Long known as a workhorse
overseas, the B-1s were grounded for nearly four weeks this spring due to
issues with an ejection seat.
According to the subcommittee's version of the 2020 defense policy
bill, Senators want the Air Force to take more responsibility for solving the
problems. "The committee is concerned B-1 readiness does not have the
priority and resources to improve B-1 mission-capable rates," the report
states. "This is evidenced by fully mission-capable aircraft currently in
single digits and aircrew being rerouted from flying the B-1 to other aircraft
due to lack of B-1 aircraft for training."
The Air Force also grounded B-1s in June 2018, after the wing of
an aircraft from Dyess AFB, Tex., caught fire during training-and the ejection
seat would not budge.
Gen. Timothy Ray, head of Air Force Global Strike Command, has
acknowledged B-1 inspections as necessary for the aging fleet despite affecting
readiness. The Boeing-built B-1s entered service in the 1980s, but didn't fly
their first combat mission until 1998. Since then, however, it's been a
workhorse.
"It's not a young airplane," Ray said. "Wear and tear is part of the things we find."
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