NDAA
would put brakes on A-10 aircraft retirement, but let others go
Dec 8, 12:30 AM
A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft sit on the flight line at Cheyenne Air National Guard Base, Wyo. The House's version of the fiscal 2022 National Defense Authorization Act would block the Air Force from retiring the Warthog. (Senior Airman Kristine Legate/U.S. Air Force)
WASHINGTON
— A new compromise version of the National Defense
Authorization Act for fiscal 2022 would allow the Air Force to
retire most of the aircraft it sought to downsize — but not the A-10
Thunderbolt II.
If
signed into law, this version of the NDAA would deliver another defeat for the
Air Force’s efforts to retire the Warthog. The
proposed bill includes a Senate provision blocking the Air Force from retiring
or otherwise mothballing any A-10s in 2022, except for those that have suffered
a significant mishap and are no longer mission-capable.
This
version of the bill, negotiated between Democratic and Republican leaders of
the House and Senate armed services committees, was introduced on Tuesday. It
could see a vote in the House as soon as Tuesday night, and from there, the
Senate is expected to take it up this week.
The
Air Force has long sought to retire A-10s so it can free up more money and
resources to modernize and focus on capabilities that can better hold up in a
high-end fight against an advanced adversary such as China or Russia, but the
move repeatedly encountered pushback from lawmakers.
Air
Force Secretary Frank Kendall, speaking at the Reagan National Defense Forum on
Saturday, specifically mentioned the Warthog as an example of an aging plane
that should be retired to allow the service to focus more on China. He called
the old iron in the service’s fleet “an anchor holding back the Air Force.”
The
NDAA also would require the Air Force to report by March on the status of
re-winging A-10s and the timeline for finishing them.
It
would also allow the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps to procure 85 F-35
fighters, as well as increase funding to improve their maintenance and bring
down sustainment costs.
But
later this decade, the NDAA could impose limits on the number of F-35s the
military could acquire in an attempt to rein in rising costs of sustaining the
Joint Strike Fighter fleet.
The
NDAA would restrict how many F-35s each services could have beginning in 2028
if they don’t meet affordability targets. The bill would set a formula lowering
the F-35 inventory if its actual cost-per-tail exceed the set goal in fiscal
2027. The Air Force aims to eventually have 1,763 F-35As, the Marine Corps
would have an inventory of 353 F-35Bs and 67 F-35Cs, and the Navy would have
273 F-35Cs.
The
provision has been watered down from its original proposal earlier this year,
which would have put a 2026 deadline in place. It also would allow the defense
secretary to waive the limits on a particular F-35 model if more of those
fighters were needed to meet a combatant commander’s strategic needs.
The
NDAA would also prevent the defense secretary from entering a performance-based
logistics sustainment contract for the F-35 or its engine, until the department
can certify that the contract would either reduce costs or increase readiness
or availability.
The
NDAA would also require the Air Force and the joint chiefs to tell lawmakers
more about the Air Force’s future plans for its aerial refueling aircraft. The
proposed NDAA calls for more information on what the requirements for the
proposed bridge tanker — also known as the KC-Y — would be, its acquisition
strategy and how much it might cost. Lawmakers also want to see the plan for
developing a follow-on advanced tanker, or the KC-Z.
It
would also prevent the Air Force from moving forward on the bridge tanker until
the new version of the KC-46′s Remote Vision System — which boom operators use
to guide the refueling boom into another aircraft — begins operational testing.
The
NDAA would also allow the Air Force to retire 14 KC-10 Extenders in 2022 and
another 12 in 2023, as well as 18 KC-135 Stratotankers.
And
it would require the defense secretary to issue a report on sustainment costs
for all fighter aircraft and spell out what the Defense Department plans to do
to cut those costs.
The
NDAA would also provide additional money for the Air Force to buy five more
F-15EX fighters, which are currently unfunded, as well as funds to modernize
the E-8 JSTARS aircraft and for engines for the upcoming EC-37B Compass Call.
And
it would fund the Air Force’s efforts to continue developing the T-7A Red Hawk trainer aircraft and
for the Air Force and Navy’s Next Generation Air Dominance programs.
The
Navy would get funding to buy 12 F/A-18E/F Super Hornet fighters. And the bill
would pay for four Air Force MQ-9 Reaper drones and one MQ-1 Gray Eagle for the
Army.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.