Air Force eyes contract for AWACS replacement in 2023
Feb 9, 04:51 PM
The Air Force wants to hear more from defense contractors on how they would provide a prototype replacement for the E-3 Sentry, or AWACS, aircraft by 2028. (Tech. Sgt. Gregory Brook/Air Force)
WASHINGTON
— The Air Force said this week a contract to buy replacement for the aging E-3G Sentry —
also known as the AWACS, or Airborne Warning and Control System aircraft —
could come in fiscal 2023.
According
to a request for information released Tuesday, the service wants to know within
30 days how a potential contractor would deliver at least two prototype
aircraft to replace the AWACS, including ground support and training systems,
within five years of an expected 2023 award.
The
Air Force noted the RFI was issued for its own planning purposes and is not a
promise to issue a request for proposals in the future. But it provides the
fullest picture yet of the time frame and requirements the service may be eying
for the E-3′s replacement.
The
E-3 AWACS, which dates back to the 1970s, is a heavily modified Boeing 707 with
an unmistakable 30-foot rotating radar dome above its fuselage. It provides
command and control and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities
to manage the battlefield, and its radar has a range of more than 250 miles.
The
Air Force has flown the AWACS in numerous conflicts in recent decades,
including the Gulf War and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and has used it in
support of humanitarian relief operations after hurricanes Rita and Katrina by
coordinating military and civilian rescue efforts.
But
the Air Force’s 31 E-3s are 43 years old on average, and keeping them
maintained has become more and more challenging, prompting one top general to
push for a replacement as soon as possible.
The
Air Force’s statistics on mission-capable rates show the increasing difficulty
in keeping the AWACS in the air. The E-3G’s mission-capable rates plunged 10
percentage points last year from 70.7% in 2020 to 60.7% in 2021. The E-3B
similarly slumped from 65.8% to 55.8% during that same period.
The
Air Force wants companies responding to the RFI to explain how their proposed
replacement aircrafts would deliver multiple capabilities the AWACS now provides.
Those capabilities should include an advanced Airborne Moving Target Indication
radar that could maintain a 360-degree surveillance picture while homing in on
targets and perform real-time data processing of targets, the RFI said.
The
Air Force also wants to know how a replacement aircraft would tell the
difference between friendly and enemy forces, conduct radar-based maritime
surveillance, and conduct simultaneously at least six battle management command
and control missions — including air traffic control, close air support,
suppression of enemy air defenses, air refueling, and combat search and rescue.
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