Farewell,
Bones: Air Force finishes latest round of B-1B bomber retirements
Friday,
Sep 24
A B-1B Lancer, tail number 85-0074, taxis at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., Sept. 23 for its final flight. The aircraft is the last of 17 Lancers previously identified for divestiture by Air Force Global Strike Command and flew to the boneyard at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona. (Clay Cupit/Air Force)
The Air Force finished retiring 17 B-1B
Lancer bombers this week, its first step toward divesting the entire fleet
within the next two decades.
The last of the bombers, which have been
in the Air Force since 1985, left Edwards Air Force Base, California, Thursday
for the service’s aviation graveyard at Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona, Air Force
Global Strike Command said in a release Friday.
“The divestiture plan was executed very
smoothly,” Brig. Gen. Kenyon Bell, AFGSC director of logistics and engineering,
said in the release. “With fewer aircraft in the B-1 fleet, maintainers will be
able to give more time and attention to each aircraft remaining in the fleet.”
B-1Bs can wield conventional weapons but
not nuclear arms, and can carry the largest load of guided and unguided weapons
of any Air Force aircraft. The 62-jet fleet is being phased out to make way for
the dual-capable, stealthy B-21 Raider bomber now in production at Northrop
Grumman.
Forty-five of the original 100 B-1Bs are
still in use and are housed at Ellsworth AFB, South Dakota, and Dyess AFB,
Texas. The Air Force retired about three dozen in the early 2000s and has lost
several others in crashes. It received its first Lancer in 1985 and first
deployed it in combat against Iraq in 1998.
But heavy use in U.S. Central Command for missions like close air
support for ground troops — which the B-1 wasn’t built to do — came at a cost.
Less than half of the Lancer fleet was combat-ready in 2019, for example, when
only six bombers were available for regular operations.
“Continuous operations over the last 20
years have taken a toll on our B-1B fleet, and the aircraft we retired would
have taken between $10 [million] and $30 million … per aircraft to get back to
a status quo fleet in the short term until the B-21 comes online,” Global
Strike said.
Those issues have led to multiple
stand-downs to address concerns like onboard fires and malfunctioning ejection
seats. All Lancers are operational again after a fuel tank issue prompted a
fleetwide grounding earlier this year, Air Force Global Strike Command
spokesperson Lt. Col. Will Russell said. He did not answer how many planes
needed repairs during the pause.
Of those that were retired starting in
February, 13 headed to the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group’s
boneyard in Arizona. Four of the B-1s at Davis-Monthan can be restored to
flight if the Air Force needs them.
Of the remaining four, one will help the service develop new structural
maintenance methods at Tinker AFB, Oklahoma; one will be used for ground
testing at Edwards; one will become part of a digital engineering project at
the National Institute for Aviation Research in Kansas; and one will go on
display at Global Strike headquarters at Barksdale AFB, Louisiana.
The Air Force is working toward a
two-bomber inventory with the B-21, slated to start arriving in the mid-2020s,
and the B-52H Stratofortresses that have been flying for six decades. It has
not announced when it will begin to retire another group of B-1Bs or begin
drawing down the B-2 Spirit fleet.
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