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Only Half Of The U.S. Air
Force’s F-22 Raptors Are ‘Combat Effective’
By
Published
5 days ago
F-22 Raptors and Many Other Planes Have Rea
diness
Issues: This new study will get
on the Pentagon’s nerves. The U.S. General Accountability Office (GAO) has
provided a stinging set of findings that will alarm military personnel in
aviation branches and wake up Congress. Simply put, many American airplanes are
not ready to fly in a mission-capable fashion. They are likely grounded due to
maintenance problems, lack of spare parts, or just general wear and tear. One
statistic jumps out from the report. If you take the Air Force’s 186 F-22s in service, only 93 are currently combat effective.
Eight Airplanes Are Not Ready to Meet Their
Mission Sets
Titled “Actions Needed to Address Persistent Sustainment Risks,” the
report looked at eight Air Force and Navy airplanes, including bombers,
fighters, tankers, and reconnaissance aircraft. It devised a metric called
“Mission Capable Rates,” which explicated maintenance health and readiness
rates for the airplanes. The GAO compared the years 2015 to 2021 and set up a
readiness goal in percentage terms for its airplane. “Readiness” means that that the airplane “has a status in which an aircraft type can
conduct at least one – and potentially all – of its assigned missions.”
Eight Airplanes Were Given A Bad Report Card
All eight airplanes in the study received less than stellar marks. The readiness goals were not even 100 percent for each airplane. Only the Air Force’s KC-135 had a 100 percent objective for all tankers. In 2021, the KC-135 scored a readiness percentage of 71.1. This was down from 75 percent in 2015. The KC-135 was the most operationally able plane in the study. Alternatively, The B-1B had a 52 percent readiness goal. From 2015 to 2021, its level dropped from 47 percent ready to 40.7 percent.
F-22 Raptor, Navy Tanker and Transport Airplanes
Need Work
The Navy’s C-130T had the worst readiness percentage in 2021 at 36.5 percent. The
goal was 75 percent. The next worst airplane in terms of readiness was the
Navy’s KC-130T which
had only a readiness score of 32.4 percent.
The Navy’s F/A-18 E/F had a 51 percent readiness rate compared to the goal of 75
percent. So, two major fighters, the F-22 Raptor and the Super Hornet have subpar readiness scores. The Super Hornet has 530 fighters
available at any given time but essentially only about 267 are ready to fly in
a mission-capable manner.
Put a Plan in Writing or Else
The GAO report
warns that “Neither the Air Force nor the Navy have completed mitigation plans
to remedy maintenance challenges, risks, or related impacts identified in any
sustainment reviews. As a result, the Air Force and Navy cannot fully address
unit-level aviation maintenance challenges affecting aircraft availability
required for training and operations.”
Congress Is Finally Getting the Full Picture
This lack of a mitigation plan means that no-one in the Air Force and
Navy has sufficiently planned and devised a way in writing to solve this
problem. The study was conducted for the U.S. House Armed
Services Committee, but the
findings assuredly landed at the Senate Armed Services Committee as well.
The GAO says
that the Air Force and Navy should be required to offer Congress reports on
these findings to solve such an abysmal readiness rate. This reporting should
also be explained in Congressional testimony among uniformed and civilian
service leadership.
Time to Listen
The GAO left a
piercing blow in its conclusion. The investigative body says that it has
sounded the alarm by issuing numerous reports on maintenance and readiness for
military airplanes over the years. GAO intimates that these studies have fallen
on deaf ears, both in Congress and in the Pentagon.
Remedy These Maintenance Challenges
“When sustainment
reviews are completed, neither the Air Force nor the Navy has completed
mitigation plans, including specific milestones, to remedy maintenance
challenges, risks, or related impacts identified in completed sustainment
reviews. Without developing mitigation plans, with specific milestones, to
remedy maintenance challenges, risks, or related impacts identified in
completed sustainment reviews, the Air Force and Navy cannot fully address
unit-level aviation maintenance challenges affecting aircraft availability
required for training and operations.”
The Air Force
and Navy plus Congress need to take this report seriously. The branches are
assuredly aware of the problem and are trying to fix it, but a plan is not a
plan if it is not in writing. The GAO wants the aviation units to have concrete
steps in a manual form that identifies step-by-step instructions to maintain a
higher level of readiness. Only then will these airplanes have a chance to take
to the skies in confidence that they will accomplish their missions without
being grounded.
Now serving as 1945’s Defense and National
Security Editor, Brent M.
Eastwood, PhD, is the author of Humans,
Machines, and Data: Future Trends in Warfare. He is an Emerging Threats expert and former U.S.
Army Infantry officer. You can follow him on Twitter @BMEastwood.
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