Mitchell
Institute: Ditch F-15EX for more F-35s, new stealth fighters
Oct 26, 10:07 PM
An F-15EX Eagle II Fighter Jet taxis out for an operational test flight at Nellis Air Force Base, Nev. A senior fellow at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies argues that the Air Force should pull the plug on the F-15EX program. (William R. Lewis/U.S. Air Force)
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Air Force should
abandon its plans to revive fourth-generation fighters under the F-15EX
program, and instead focus on building more F-35As and new stealthy fighter
jets, according to a new paper from the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace
Studies.
Former F-16 pilot Heather Penney, a
senior resident fellow at the institute, said in the paper released Monday that
the F-15EX Eagle II program is a dead end — one based on outdated technology that
wouldn’t suit the Air Force well in a high-end fight nor save money over the
F-35 program. She expects the stealth-less F-15EX will end up playing a limited
defensive role in a war, at a time when the Air Force has a limited inventory
of fighters.
“Given this reality, funding
limitations and modern mission demands, the Air Force should seek the soonest
reasonable termination point for the F-15EX,” Penney wrote.
The Air Force should instead shift
that money to boosting F-35 production and develop another fighter jet, Penney
said — one that is affordable, flexible and has stealth capability. This would
be in addition to the highly classified Next Generation Air Dominance program
that would start fielding sometime in the 2030s, to which Penney said the Air
Force should commit wholeheartedly.
In underscoring the importance of
fielding stealthy fighters, Penney pointed to the Air Force’s recent experience
in Syria. The country possessed Russian-made S-400 surface-to-air missile
systems, which the U.S. Air Force could only counter by deploying F-22s and
F-35s, she said.
And other potential foes, such as
China, Russia and Iran, will undoubtedly field that air defense system or
something similar, requiring the American service to fight with something more
capable than a fourth-generation fighter.
“Any modern battlespace will require
advanced stealth capabilities, just as the cost of entry,” Penney said.
And if the Air Force allows a
capability gap in its fighter force, Penny said, that could give China the
opening it seeks to quickly and decisively seize Taiwan.
The Mitchell Institute counts several
defense contractors among its financial backers, including Boeing, which makes
the F-15EX, and Lockheed Martin, which makes the F-35. The institute said this
report was paid for out of its general funds, and not bankrolled by particular
contractors.
In addition to pulling the plug on the
F-15EX, Penney said the Air Force should completely divest its other F-15s —
the “C,” “D,” and “E” models — as well as the A-10 Warthog from its fleet.
Those retirements should happen on a one-to-one basis as F-35s come online, she
added.
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