US
Air Force eyes fleet of 1,000 drone wingmen as planning accelerates
Mar 8, 03:00 PM
A conceptual design of low-cost, attritable drones serving as wingmen for a crewed fighter jet. (U.S. Air Force)
AURORA,
Colorado — The Air Force is ramping up plans for incorporating drone wingmen into
its fleet, and envisions 1,000 of the so-called collaborative combat aircraft
in service as it sketches out ideas.
Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said
Tuesday that the service will ask Congress for funding in the fiscal 2024
budget to move forward with the CCA program, as well as the Next Generation Air
Dominance program of futuristic fighter aircraft, so it can map out how it will
operate, organize and support these new systems.
In
his keynote address at the Air and Space Force Association’s AFA Warfare
Symposium in Aurora, Colorado, Tuesday, Kendall said he and Air Force Chief of
Staff Gen. CQ Brown told planners to assume the service might acquire 1,000
CCAs. Under this model, the Air Force would acquire two CCAs for each of 200
NGAD platforms, and two for each of 300 F-35s, Kendall said.
Kendall
cautioned those numbers aren’t likely to be what the Air Force’s inventory ends
up tallying. Instead, he said, it’s a ballpark estimate to allow the service to
estimate its basing needs, organizational structures, training and range
requirements, and sustainment concepts.
“The
CCAs will complement and enhance the performance of our crewed fighter force
structure,” Kendall said. “CCAs will dramatically improve the performance of
our crewed aircraft, and significantly reduce the risk to our pilots.”
Kendall
has made adopting autonomous CCAs into the Air Force’s future fleet one of his
top priorities as he seeks to update its fighter fleet to win a future war.
These
drones could carry out a variety of missions, including striking targets,
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, or electronic warfare, Brown
said in a February talk at the Brookings Institution.
The
Air Force envisions these drones as being less expensive than traditional
crewed aircraft, and in some cases being cheap enough that the service could
afford to lose them in combat. This would allow the Air Force to send CCAs on
riskier missions, and avoid putting human pilots in danger.
Kendall
stressed in his speech that adopting drone wingmen will not mean the Air Force
has fewer crewed fighters in its inventory. Instead, he said, CCAs can be
thought of as remotely controlled versions of the targeting or electronic
warfare pods or weapons that crewed aircraft now carry.
In
a roundtable discussion with reporters at the conference, Kendall said the Air
Force wants CCAs to cost a fraction of the F-35, which costs roughly $78
million per air frame in its 14th lot. He said affordability is a requirement
for the program.
Kendall
said the CCA program will be one of nearly 20 new or significantly ramped up
programs in the upcoming budget request. About a dozen of those will be new
starts that will require Congress’ approval, he said, and the rest are
enhancements to already existing programs such as the Air Battle Management
System.
Kendall
said in September 2022 that he hopes the Air Force will hold a competition for
CCAs in 2024, though details on that competition are scarce.
Brown
said in another roundtable Tuesday that the Air Force has three lines of effort
under way to develop CCAs: Developing the platform itself, developing the
autonomous software that will fly the CCA, and figuring out how to organize,
train, equip and supply the program.
All
three of those efforts are under way “in parallel,” Brown said. The Air Force
has brought in operators and maintainers to figure out questions such as how
the CCAs would be directed and controlled during operations, he said.
Part
of that work is figuring out how to design and mature the drone’s autonomous
core, so a fighter pilot doesn’t get overwhelmed with the responsibility of
directing and guiding the CCA, Brown said. That includes doing experiments on
autonomy with the X-62A Variable In-flight Simulator Aircraft, or VISTA, a
heavily modified F-16 fighter at Edwards Air Force Base in California
“There’s
a number of ways to do this, whether it’s voice [commands] or touchscreen,”
Brown said. “Just think about our day-to-day lives, and the autonomy we have.
So the technology is there. It’s just how we bring this into our military applications.”
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.