The
race is on to replace NATO's early-warning aircraft fleet
WASHINGTON - On June 29, a solicitation titled, "NATO International
Competitive Bidding (ICB): Alliance Future Surveillance and Control (AFSC)
Project-Risk Reduction and Feasibility Study," popped up on Beta.Sam.Gov,
a U.S. government contracting site.
The appearance of the notice represented an early, but important, step in a
long process of finding a replacement for NATO's fleet of airborne early
warning and control AWACS planes, which have seen increased usage over the past
five years.
"What you've spotted online is the U.S. government preparing U.S.
companies for this upcoming call for bids," a NATO official, speaking on
background, explained to Defense News. "Allies will then need to decide
what form [the new design] should take."
Currently, 18 nations participate in NATO's early-warning-and-control force,
which operates 14 E-3As: Belgium, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany,
Greece, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal,
Romania, Spain, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States. The planes
are based at NATO Air Base Geilenkirchen, Germany.
NATO plans to spend $1 billion for a final service life extension of the
aircraft, which would keep it flying until 2035. Any delays in the
decision-making process will likely increase the cost for the fleet, meaning
there is heavy pressure to hit key milestones for an alliance that rarely buys
military gear as collective.
As of July, six consortia from across the alliance have delivered concept
studies to NATO leadership; Brussels is "currently assessing" those
concepts with the goal of defining a "more narrow scope" for
requirements before the end of 2020, per the NATO official. That will be
followed in 2021 by another round of responses from industry, and a 2023 deep
dive by NATO which is likely to set up the final requirements. Overall, the
development stage through 2023 has a budget of EUR 118.2 million ($139
million).
NATO is still yet to decide whether a single platform or a system of systems
will replace its E-3A AWACS fleet of surveillance planes.
In the U.S., expect Boeing and Northrop Grumman to be in the running, while the
likely European contenders would be Saab and Airbus, according to Doug Barrie,
senior military air analyst at the International Institute for Strategic
Studies think tank in London. "With all the usual caveats, the most likely
outcome is that it is U.S., perhaps with some European add-ons," Barrie
predicts.
Richard Aboulafia, an analyst with the Teal Group, agrees that a "U.S.
prime, and lots of European mandates for local sustainment, support, and
upgrade work" is a likely outcome.
"The European industrial role is a bit complicated by the fact that Airbus
has zero experience here," Aboulafia argued. "Saab certainly can do
the job, but GlobalEye simply doesn't have the capabilities of a higher-end
system, which means Boeing, or, just conceivably, Northrop Grumman/Lockheed
Martin."
Firms that end up as second-tier suppliers may still end up with a strong work
share, depending on how the project shapes up. The official NATO line on the
program follows the "system of systems" approach currently popular
inside the U.S. Air Force, with the idea that a single platform may not be the
optimal solution.
"The replacement for the AWACS aircraft could include different
combinations of systems in the air, on land, at sea, in space and in
cyberspace," the NATO official said. "The aim is for the solution to
be ready by 2035, when the AWACS aircraft reach the end of their service
life."
Barrie sees costs and benefits to either approach, noting that a distributed
system "is less vulnerable overall to kinetic attack but is heavily
reliant on connectivity," while a traditional setup "is more
vulnerable to physical attack, but if there is onboard command and control less
reliant overall on wider connectivity and off-board analysis."
Adds Aboulafia, "That system-of-systems approach is a good talking point,
but creating the broader architecture is quite complicated. Also, creating a
system is kind of a given for airborne early warning, but there needs to be a
central platform doing the bulk of the heavy lifting. Thus, the teams will need
to revolve around a platform prime."
While the overall price of the program will depend on the final design,
Aboulafia predicts everything put together could cost in the $10 billion range
to buy an equivalent of the original 17-aircraft NATO purchase. And that money
may well be worth it for the alliance, according to Barrie.
"It's been a practical and a symbolic asset," he said, "and in
the current European security environment air surveillance and C2 isn't
becoming any less important."
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