WASHINGTON — A new tactical aircraft
study underway could make certain what has until now been a suspicion: The U.S.
Air Force is unlikely to purchase all of the 1,763 F-35A jets in its program of
record.
The service is undertaking the study
as it readies its fiscal 2023 budget and grapples with reducing the types of
fighters it flies from seven to four main platforms by 2030, as prescribed
by the service’s chief of staff.
The four platforms could include:
- The sixth-generation Next Generation Air Dominance system, or NGAD, which
will supersede the F-22.
- The F-35A Joint Strike Fighter, which will
make up the preponderance of the fleet.
- The F-15EX, which will replace much of the
existing F-15 inventory.
- And either the F-16 or its replacement.
That last decision is the most
significant for the F-35 program. The Air Force’s original plan was to purchase
enough F-35s to supersede all of its F-16s. So if the Air Force keeps the F-16
— or develops a separate low-cost replacement for part of the F-16 fleet —
does it need to buy as many F-35s?
“That’s the big question,” said Todd
Harrison, an aerospace and defense budget expert with the Center for Strategic
and International Studies. “Quite honestly, I don’t think there is any good
news that will come out for the F-35 program for this. It’s only potential
downsides. That’s real risk to the program.”
The Air Force has maintained that the
F-35 program of record remains unchanged, but the ongoing tactical aircraft
study is set to provide alternative models of what its fighter inventory could
look like, potentially including proposals with fewer F-35s.
The idea that the Air Force would buy
all 1,763 F-35As “has been the greatest work of fiction in defense budgeting
for about a decade now,” said Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace analyst with the
Teal Group. “What we’re really talking about is the real number. It’s not 1,763
[F-35As]. Is it 1,200? Is it 1,400? Is it 1,000? We don’t know.”
Any plans to radically reshape the Air
Force’s fighter inventory will come under scrutiny by new civilian leadership,
which includes Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall and Andrew
Hunter, who was nominated to become the service’s acquisition chief.
Kendall, who served as the Pentagon’s
top acquisition official during the Obama administration, has criticized the
F-35 program, calling the early years of its development “acquisition
malpractice.” However, he grew more supportive of the aircraft during his
tenure, in May calling it “the best tactical aircraft of its type
in the world.”
Asked recently whether the Air Force
should buy a low-cost fighter to replace some of its F-16s instead of
purchasing F-35s, Kendall was noncommittal.
“One of the things I think we need to
do is take a little bit of time now to sort through the options carefully and
do some of that analysis,” he said during an Aug. 13 interview with Defense
News. “Make sure we’ve got the requirements right, make sure we’ve got the
concepts right for the future and then move as quickly as we can to field those
capabilities.”
Finding the right mix
When the U.S. Air Force fought in
Operation Desert Storm in 1991, it operated a fleet of about 4,000 fighters.
Fast forward to 2021, and that inventory has shrunk to 2,000 aircraft with an
average age of 28 years, said Air Combat Command chief Gen. Mark Kelly in an Aug. 16 interview with Defense
News.
To win against a near-peer nation like
Russia or China, the U.S. needs “high capability, high capacity and
affordability,” he said.
“We have to be able to compete and
fight well beyond the permissive counterinsurgency environments we’ve operated
in for the last 20 years,” he added. “That takes a range of capabilities.”
The Air Force’s tactical aircraft
study is meant to help the service identify the right mix of fighters needed to
thwart advanced threats in 2030 and beyond, while at the same time establishing
a plan for drawing down the large number of legacy aircraft types that put
pressure on operations and maintenance accounts.
The U.S.
Air Force’s F-22 fleet may not be around for much longer. The future Next
Generation Air Dominance system is set to replace the jets. (Airman 1st Class
Emily Smallwood/U.S. Air Force)
The study was first acknowledged by
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. CQ Brown in February.
“I don’t know that I’ll come to an
answer that here’s the exact mix,” Brown said at a May event. “I want to get us shaped
in a direction because right now we have seven fighter fleets. My intent is to
get down to about four.”
The service completed the first draft
of the study, but Kendall has asked for additional analysis, said Lt. Gen.
Clinton Hinote, the deputy chief of staff for strategy, integration and
requirements.
The Office of the Secretary of
Defense, which is performing several evaluations of its own, will also
scrutinize the Air Force’s study. And the Pentagon’s Cost Assessment and
Program Evaluation office is carrying out a review of the Air Force’s and Navy’s
sixth-generation fighter programs, which will evaluate the associated
acquisition strategies, costs, technical maturity and schedule risks.
CAPE is also analyzing the Air
Force’s “Digital Century Series” business case, a potential NGAD
acquisition strategy through which aircraft manufacturers would continuously
develop new fighter designs and compete to build small batches of that
aircraft. During a July hearing, acting CAPE director Joseph Nogueira told
lawmakers that study could be finished as early as August, but a public update
on its status was unavailable by press time.
How low can it go?
Reports vary on how low the F-35
program of record could fall.
Internal documents by the Air Force’s
future war-fighting cell indicated a plan to curb orders at 1,050 jets,
Aviation Week reported in December. Will Roper, the Air Force’s acquisition executive
during the Trump administration, called for F-35 purchases to be capped at
about 800 units, CNN reported in May.
Any attempt to cut the program of record
will face a difficult fight in Congress — particularly from lawmakers whose
districts economically benefit from the jet’s production and who have
successfully increased F-35 procurement beyond the Defense Department’s budget
request since 2015.
That tradition may be in jeopardy as
powerful lawmakers like House Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith,
D-Wash., criticize the cost of operating, sustaining and upgrading the jet. But
it remains to be seen whether Congress would be amenable to a cut to the
overall buy, Harrison said.
“Earlier this year, we started hearing
a lot more negative sentiment coming out of Congress about the F-35 program,
and quite frankly the Air Force has seemed to soften on the program as well,”
he said. “That may be a sign that congressional winds are shifting, that
sentiment for the F-35 may have peaked. … But it may be too soon to call it.
Negative talk does not necessarily translate into negative appropriations.”
Any changes to the program that result
in cost growth could be anathema to lawmakers. F-35 manufacturer Lockheed
Martin has spent more than a decade trying to lower the price of the F-35A to
$80 million or less, on par with a fourth-generation fighter. It finally
accomplished that goal in a 2019 deal for the 13th batch of aircraft, after
years of ramping up production and benefiting from economies of scale.
While Lockheed could argue cuts to the
F-35 program might result in higher costs, analysts said the company will have
to show its work. Unit costs for the aircraft are unlikely to fall much further
than the current price of $78 million per F-35A, Aboulafia said. To keep unit
costs stable while reducing the overall buy, the Air Force could simply sustain
its current production rate and cut off procurement early, Harrison explained.
F-35A
jets gather at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, in 2020 for an exercise meant to test
deployment capabilities. (R. Nial Bradshaw/U.S. Air Force)
Aboulafia added that while the cost of
sustaining small aircraft fleets is “ruinous,” there may not be much financial
benefit for sustaining 1,763 F-35As compared to a fleet around half that size.
In a statement, Lockheed Martin
spokesman Brett Ashworth said the cost of the F-35 shouldn’t be the only
criteria for evaluating the aircraft’s value. Instead, the Air Force needs to
consider the “cost per effect.”
“The F-35 is the only aircraft in the
world with the ability to get to the fight undetected, then gather, synthesize
and share information with not only other aircraft, but units on the ground as
well,” Ashworth said. “The F-35′s procurement costs include the sensors
necessary to accomplish this mission, as well as the modernization and
sustainment costs to maintain them. No fourth-generation aircraft can offer a
similar capability. And the fight of tomorrow will only be more difficult and
dangerous as next-generation threats evolve.”
Not all analysts agree the F-35 should
be targeted for cuts. While the Air Force is right to reduce the number of
tactical aircraft platforms it flies, it’s undervaluing the capability a
stealthy, highly networked fighter like the F-35 would bring to a battle with a
sophisticated adversary like China, said Rebecca Grant, an aerospace analyst
with IRIS Independent Research.
“Let’s get the most sophisticated
war-fighting platform that’s in full production, and let’s buy all of those,”
she said. “Put the money into F-35 because you know that platform is useful for
your newcomers — your unmanned [aircraft], your [expendable drones], your
hypersonic weapons.”
Instead of following Brown’s plan to
pare down the fighter fleet to four platforms, Grant contended the Air Force
should retire the A-10, cancel the F-15EX program and replace all of its F-16s
with F-35s.
“Stop making [a] self-imposed
affordability number from 20 years ago their key war-fighting requirement,” she
recommended. “Stop designing the future war-fighting force with cost as the
dominant variable while throwing out [the requirement for] penetrating enemy
airspace.”
To successfully argue the F-35 program
should be cut, both Harrison and Aboulafia said the Air Force must shed more
light on the “missing variables” of its future fighter proposal. Specifically,
it needs to clarify details about plans to replace early block F-16s and field
the sixth-generation NGAD family of systems.
“A lot is going to hinge on: Can they
show Congress that they have a credible replacement for capabilities?” Harrison
said.
So far, the Air Force has kept most
information about NGAD under wraps, including what technologies will make up
the family of systems, how much it will cost, how many will be purchased and
when it will be fielded.
Meanwhile, Brown said new design and
manufacturing techniques, such as digital engineering, could allow the service
to develop a “four-and-a-half-[generation] or fifth-gen-minus” fighter to
replace early block F-16s at a lower cost than the F-35.
However, Harrison is skeptical such an
aircraft could be built at a cheaper price tag than the advanced F-16s rolling
off Lockheed Martin’s production line in Greenville, South Carolina.
“That just doesn’t seem to hold a lot
of water, the idea that we could somehow now make a fourth-gen aircraft cheaper
than these existing fourth-gen platforms that are way down the learning curve
already, and their development is already a sunk cost,” Harrison said.
The particulars of how many or what
types of fighters the Air Force will need are uncertain, but one thing is
clear, said Kelly: Going forward, the service will have to walk a tightrope,
balancing the capability and number of aircraft it needs with what it can
afford.
“I don’t see any of the programs
accelerating or expanding into these big exponential increases in a buy, just
because of the realities of the budget,” he said.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.