|
B-2 bombers
practice on US targets
HONOLULU—More than 18,000 feet above the mountains on Hawaii’s biggest
island, two B-2 stealth bombers drop six 2,000-pound inert bombs on a
training range below.
It’s a scene being repeated monthly as the Air Force’s sleek,
boomerang-shaped planes use Hawaii for target practice. The aim is to
make sure pilots are trained and ready to act if needed. The bombers
have been assigned to Guam to deter North Korea and to fill gaps in the
regional U.S. military presence created by deployments to Iraq and
Afghanistan.
“There are very few potential adversaries in the world that don’t
understand and respect what this bomber capability can bring,” said Col.
Timothy Saffold, deputy commander of the 613th Air and Space Operations
Center in Hawaii.
The B-2 bomber, which costs about $1.2 billion, is designed so that it
doesn’t show up on radar, giving it a unique ability to penetrate an
enemy’s defenses and go after heavily defended targets. It became
available for military operations in 1997.
The planes have been flying test runs over Hawaii and Alaska since the
Pentagon began rotating bombers through Guam in 2004. But they only
started dropping inert bombs on the Big Island’s Pohakuloa Training Area
last month. In the past, pilots only simulated dropping weapons over the
islands. Now, they can see whether the bombs they release land where
they are supposed to.
The planes are equipped to drop “smart” bombs, or weapons guided to
their targets by GPS technology. But they don’t use it in the Hawaii
drills.
Instead, the airmen rely on gravity — and extensive data on wind speed
and elevation — to deliver their unarmed bombs to the right spot.
Maj. Brian Bogue, deputy chief of strategy plans at the 613th Air and
Space Operations Center, said such methods are extremely accurate and
that there is little chance any bombs would stray off the Pohakuloa
range.
Planners intentionally pick targets in the center of the range, Bogue
said, adding that two miles is the closest any of the bombs has come to
the range boundary.
Furthermore, because none of the bombs contains explosives, there’s no
danger of one going off. During a training mission to Hawaii this month,
the bombers flew about 18 hours roundtrip. Ohio Air National Guard
tankers refueled the planes in midair twice along the way.
During the last refueling session before the bombers headed back to
Guam, a B-2 traveling about 400 mph gently eased up to a KC-135 tanker
26,500 feet above the Pacific Ocean.
When the bomber was just 20 feet away, the tanker attached its boom to
the B-2 and sent 35,000 gallons of gas into the bomber’s tank.
On the way back from Pohakuloa, the bombers launched a simulated attack
on Pearl Harbor to practice targeting naval assets. Part of their
mission was to use their stealth capabilities to sneak past their
make-believe adversary’s radar and take out its defenses.
“This particular mission covers the full spectrum of what we can do,”
said Maj. Tim Hale, one of the pilots in the exercise.
The B-2 bombers assigned to Guam also fly to Alaska for similar training
exercises at the Yukon range. Their permanent home is Whiteman Air Force
Base in Missouri, where all 21 of the Air Force’s B-2 bombers are based.
The U.S. military started rotating bombers — including B-1 and B-52
planes as well as the stealth variety — to Guam in March 2004.
The move compensated for U.S. forces diverted to fight in the Middle
East. And it came as North Korea increasingly upped the ante in the
standoff over its development of nuclear weapons.
In April 2003, North Korea told the U.S. it had nuclear weapons and
might test them, export them or use them. Several months later it
declared it reprocessed 8,000 spent fuel rods from a nuclear reactor.
Such a move, if true, would yield enough plutonium for at least one
nuclear bomb, experts say.
Bruce Bechtol, a professor at the Marine Corps Command and Staff College
in Quantico, Va., said North Korea refers to the Guam bomber deployments
in its propaganda, indicating it felt their presence.
Pyongyang realizes the U.S. would use the planes to respond if the North
attacked South Korea, said Bechtol, an expert on air power on the Korean
peninsula. It is also well aware of planes and forces the U.S. has
amassed in Japan that could be used against it, he said.
“This all affects how North Korea looks at their foreign policy, how
they look at the type of behavior they may engage in with their
neighbor,” Bechtol said.
The United States has formally made new proposals to Russia aimed at
easing tension over its missile defense plans in Europe, the Russian
Foreign Ministry said on Thursday.
Russia has denounced U.S. plans to deploy a radar in the Czech Republic
and interceptor missiles in Poland as a threat to its security. It
offered building up a joint missile defense system instead but this idea
has aroused little interest in Washington.
Washington promised to set out its latest proposals to Moscow in writing
following talks between foreign and defense ministers last month. He
gave no details of the substance of the proposals.—Agencies |