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Aging US Air Force wants big bucks fix
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—Air Force officials are warning that unless their budget is
increased dramatically, and soon, the military’s high-flying branch
won’t dominate the skies as it has for decades. After more than six
years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Air Force’s aging jet
fighters, bombers, cargo aircraft and gunships are at the breaking
point, they say, and expensive, ultramodern replacements are needed
fast.
“What we’ve done is put the requirement on the table that says, ‘If
we’re going to do the missions you’re going to ask us to do, it will
require this kind of investment,’” Maj. Gen. Paul Selva, the Air Force’s
director of strategic planning, said in an interview. “Failing that, we
take what is already a geriatric Air Force,” Selva said, “and we drive
it for another 20 years into an area of uncertainty.” An extra $20
billion each year over the next five — beginning with an Air Force
budget of about $137 billion in 2009 instead of the $117 billion
proposed by the Bush administration — would solve that problem,
according to Selva and other senior Air Force officers.
Yet the prospects for huge infusions of cash seem dim. Congress is
expected to boost the 2009 budget, but not to the level urged by the Air
Force. In the years that follow, a possible recession, a rising federal
deficit and a distaste for higher taxes all portend a decline in defense
spending regardless of which party wins the White House in November.
“The Air Force is going to be confronting a major procurement crisis
because it can’t buy all the things that it absolutely needs,” said Dov
Zakheim, a former Pentagon comptroller. “It’s going to force us to
rethink, yet again, what is the strategy we want? What can we give up?”
The Air Force’s distress is partly self-inflicted, says Steve Kosiak of
the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington. The
F-22 Raptor and F-35 Lightning, the new jet fighters that will supplant
the F-15 Eagle and F-16 Falcon, have drastically higher price tags than
their predecessors and require a bigger chunk of the defense budget.
“One of the reasons their equipment has aged so much is because they
continue to move ahead with the development and presumed acquisition of
new weapon systems that cost two to three times as much as the systems
they are replacing,” Kosiak said. “It’s like replacing a Toyota with a
Mercedes.”
It’s not as if the Air Force has gone without any new airplanes. The B-2
Spirit stealth bomber, the C-17 Globemaster airlifter and the CV-22
tilt-rotor, which flies like a helicopter or an airplane, have all been
added since the mid-1990s. The Air Force also is planning to spend
between $30 billion and $40 billion over the next 15 years for new
refueling tankers. A contract is expected to be awarded soon. Those new
tankers, however, won’t be flying until 2013.
The Air Force isn’t alone in wanting more money, but its appetite is far
greater than the other military branches. Shortly after President Bush
submitted his defense plan for the 2009 budget year, which begins Oct.
1, each service outlined for Congress what it felt was left out. The Air
Force’s “wish list” totaled $18.8 billion, almost twice as much as the
other three services combined.
“There’s no justification for it. Period. End of story,” said Gordon
Adams, a former Clinton administration budget official who specializes
in defense issues. “Until someone constrains these budget requests, the
hunger for more will charge ahead unchecked.” Current F-15s and F-16s
are on average more than 20 years old and have reached a point where
spending more money on extensive repairs is a poor investment, Selva
said. Originally designed to last 4,000 flying hours, both have been
extended beyond 8,000.
An F-15 with a comparatively low 5,000 flying hours disintegrated during
a routine training flight over Missouri in early November. For the Air
Force, that crash has become a touchstone event that demonstrates the
precarious state of a fleet collectively older than any in the service’s
60-year history. Following the Missouri accident, more than 400 F-15s
were grounded as Air Force mechanics scoured them for defects that might
cause a similar accident. The F-15, a twin-engine jet with a top speed
of 1,875 miles per hour, is the anchor of the nation’s air defense
network.
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